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Kansas com
Derby on
front line in
battle over
union rights
BY DION LEFLER
The Wichita Eagle
Stand aside, Wisconsin: Derby is now the front Illustration by Mike Hutmacher/The Wichita Eagle
line in the battle over public employee unions. BY RICK PLUMLEE 1,161 permit holders, or 0.09 percent.
Amid difficult negotiations with its police force The Wichita Eagle The numbers squeeze even tighter
and with firefighters recently deciding to form their when you consider that of the 44 permit
own union, the City Council is considering stripping hen Jake Jacobs was charged holders charged, 17 licenses have been
both groups — and all other city employees — of the
right to collective bargaining.
But police and firefighters aren’t backing down.
Last week, about 100 people — many of them in
uniform — packed the council chamber for a public
W with four counts of aggravated
assault after firing a shot inside
an east Wichita store in August,
he joined a very select group:
A Kansan with a concealed-carry per-
revoked because they were convicted of a
crime that disqualifies them from having
a permit. Jacobs is among the 17 whose
licenses are currently suspended, pend-
ing the outcome of their cases. The re-
hearing on the issue. The council delayed a decision mit charged with a crime while using a maining 10 have had their licenses rein-
until a member who is ill returns to the bench. firearm. stated because either the charges were
State law allows local government bodies to de- Of the 51,078 permits that have been dismissed or they were convicted of less-
cide whether their employees can unionize and issued by the state since the law took er charges.
bargain as a group. The Derby Council voted “yes” effect in 2007, 44 permit holders have Jacobs became part of the statistics after
to unions 25 years ago, and the issue now before the been charged with a crime while using a being charged with four counts of aggra-
current council is whether to reconsider that deci- firearm through late October, according vated assault on Aug. 15 as the result of a
sion. to records provided by the Kansas At- shooting incident two days earlier at the
City Manager Kathy Sexton brought the option to torney General’s Office.
the council with a list of reasons why she thinks it That works out to one charge for every Please see GUNS, Page 12A
would be a good idea.
“To some extent there is an ‘us versus them’ cli-
mate” surrounding relations between the unions
and management, she said. Further, “there’s contin-
FELONY CHARGES, 12A Rick Plumlee/The Wichita Eagle
Sign posted on the front door of the
D&M Barber Shop in Derby. A number
uous pressure on the council to enhance pay for A glance at concealed-carry permit holders who of businesses around the state have
specific groups (union employees), which then the same sign to show their support for
have been charged with felonies concealed-carry permit holders.
Please see DERBY, Page 7A
©2012 The Wichita Eagle and Arts & Leisure 1C Crossword 8C Local & State 1B Opinion 16A-17A Sports 1D
Beacon Publishing Co., 825 E.
Douglas, Wichita, KS 67202. Business 5B Help Wanted 1F Obituaries 2B Real Estate 1E Weather 8B
Sunday
Kansas com
Derby on
front line in
battle over
union rights
BY DION LEFLER
The Wichita Eagle
Stand aside, Wisconsin: Derby is now the front Illustration by Mike Hutmacher/The Wichita Eagle
line in the battle over public employee unions. BY RICK PLUMLEE 1,161 permit holders, or 0.09 percent.
Amid difficult negotiations with its police force The Wichita Eagle The numbers squeeze even tighter
and with firefighters recently deciding to form their when you consider that of the 44 permit
own union, the City Council is considering stripping hen Jake Jacobs was charged holders charged, 17 licenses have been
both groups — and all other city employees — of the
right to collective bargaining.
But police and firefighters aren’t backing down.
Last week, about 100 people — many of them in
uniform — packed the council chamber for a public
W with four counts of aggravated
assault after firing a shot inside
an east Wichita store in August,
he joined a very select group:
A Kansan with a concealed-carry per-
revoked because they were convicted of a
crime that disqualifies them from having
a permit. Jacobs is among the 17 whose
licenses are currently suspended, pend-
ing the outcome of their cases. The re-
hearing on the issue. The council delayed a decision mit charged with a crime while using a maining 10 have had their licenses rein-
until a member who is ill returns to the bench. firearm. stated because either the charges were
State law allows local government bodies to de- Of the 51,078 permits that have been dismissed or they were convicted of less-
cide whether their employees can unionize and issued by the state since the law took er charges.
bargain as a group. The Derby Council voted “yes” effect in 2007, 44 permit holders have Jacobs became part of the statistics after
to unions 25 years ago, and the issue now before the been charged with a crime while using a being charged with four counts of aggra-
current council is whether to reconsider that deci- firearm through late October, according vated assault on Aug. 15 as the result of a
sion. to records provided by the Kansas At- shooting incident two days earlier at the
City Manager Kathy Sexton brought the option to torney General’s Office.
the council with a list of reasons why she thinks it That works out to one charge for every Please see GUNS, Page 12A
would be a good idea.
“To some extent there is an ‘us versus them’ cli-
mate” surrounding relations between the unions
and management, she said. Further, “there’s contin-
FELONY CHARGES, 12A Rick Plumlee/The Wichita Eagle
Sign posted on the front door of the
D&M Barber Shop in Derby. A number
uous pressure on the council to enhance pay for A glance at concealed-carry permit holders who of businesses around the state have
specific groups (union employees), which then the same sign to show their support for
have been charged with felonies concealed-carry permit holders.
Please see DERBY, Page 7A
©2012 The Wichita Eagle and Arts & Leisure 1C Crossword 8C Local & State 1B Opinion 16A-17A Sports 1D
Beacon Publishing Co., 825 E.
Douglas, Wichita, KS 67202. Business 5B Help Wanted 1F Obituaries 2B Real Estate 1E Weather 8B
2A THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ★ WWW.KANSAS.COM
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WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 3A
25
labyrinth-like investigation of unopened e-mails that are have the government rifle of privacy — at least not rules apply at different times
%
supposedly anonymous e- less than 180 days old, which through their stuff without enough to push lawmakers to and even in different places.
mails can lead to the down- do require a warrant. Any probable cause, without good strengthen the laws. For instance, the U.S. Court
fall of the country’s top in- e-mail that’s been opened or reason and a neutral, de- Baker Owens, of Atlanta, of Appeals for the 9th Circuit
telligence official, more than is more than 180 days old is tached judge looking at it and said he’s not worried about has set more stringent stan-
a few Americans have to obtainable through a sub- agreeing there’s a good rea- intrusion by Big Brother be- dards than the ones outlined
wonder: Is my in-box safe?
Sure, the typical citizen isn’t
poena.
Internet service providers
son.”
The solution? “Washington
cause he has nothing to hide.
“Even if someone did hack
above, Opsahl said.
In the western states under off
engaged in salacious acts
with a high-ranking intelli-
such as Google or Yahoo can
fight such demands, though
lawmakers need to update
some privacy laws, companies
into my e-mail, all they’d get
is a million reminders from
that court’s jurisdiction, law
enforcement must obtain a any one item
gence officer. Nor is the aver- often unsuccessfully. need to be more careful Yahoo about Fantasy sports warrant to be granted access
age Joe — or Jane — engaged And regardless of whether a about what data they collect, leagues, Twitter updates, and to a person’s private electron-
in criminal activity that might subpoena or a warrant is and the government needs to various political spamming. ic communications. If you
reasonably trigger a govern- used, law enforcement offi- be more selective about the Not as much fun,” said Ow- think that’s crazy-making, get through SUNDAY nov 25th
ment probe. cials can request that you be investigations it pursues,” ens, via e-mail. this: It doesn’t matter where
But if there’s anything to be kept in the dark about the said Marc Rotenberg, execu- But on Twitter, Zack Log- the person under investiga-
learned from the scandal that seizure for up to 90 days. So tive director of the Electronic gins, of Dahlonega, Ga., took tion lives or where the serv-
ensnared retired Gen. David you won’t even know that Privacy Information Center a harder view on whether law ers storing the e-mails are
Petraeus, experts say, it’s that your private communications and law professor at George- enforcement should be grant- located; it matters where the
one needn’t be “all in” a mess are no longer private. town University. He helped ed access to e-mails: “Not police or prosecutor are AT BRADLEY FAIR
with a top government offi- That disturbs Kurt Opsahl, write the most significant law unless someone is suspected based. 866.2700
cial for law enforcement to be senior staff attorney with the on the subject — the Electron- 10-7 MON-SAT • 1-5 SUNDAY
all in your e-mail. Electronic Frontier Founda- ic Communications Privacy
“Hopefully if there’s an tion. The Fourth Amendment, Act of 1986.
upside to this story, it’s that he said, “has been around “There are lessons to be
people realize just how much
power the government has to
read our e-mails,” said Ste-
phen Vladeck, an American PRICES GOOD NOVEMBER 19TH THRU. NOVEMBER 24TH
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4A THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
Mon-Fri
8:30am-6:00pm
808 S. Hillside Now open
Saturday
9am-1pm
d a y ’s p a p er
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jarring experience for a part
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the first syllable of the word
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until about 2005, when the Also, Mastrosimone noted ping on the Friday after
Fraternal Order of Police that even if the council does Thanksgiving for more than
became the bargaining agent vote to strip the unions of 20 years.
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49 kids killed in train, bus crash
BY MAMDOUH THABET on the bus, was pulling her Assiut’s main hospital, where
Savita Associated Press hair in grief. “My children! I the injured were being treated.
Halappanavar didn’t feed you before you Residents of Assiut are tradi-
march ASSIUT, Egypt — A speed- left,” she wailed. A witness tionally heavily armed and
through ing train crashed into a bus said the train pushed the bus many hold tribal alliances. They
central Dublin carrying Egyptian children along the tracks for nearly have complained that a lack of
on Saturday. to their kindergarten in half a mile. ambulances and equipment in
Halappanavar central Egypt on Saturday, As one man picked up the area had hindered hospitals’
died of blood killing at least 49 and pieces of shattered limbs he response.
poisoning in prompting a wave of anger screamed: “Only God can
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ISRAEL
From Page 1A
Michael Birzer, criminal justice year. “As far as I’m concerned, there’s
GUNS professor and director of the school
of community affairs at Wichita
State University, said there aren’t
“The main reason people get a
license is because this is a
A special unit in the attorney gen-
eral’s office does state and national
background checks on applicants.
nothing that needs to be confidential
about exercising a constitutional
right,” he said. “There are others
From Page 1A broken world, and we don’t want
any empirical studies that back up The office is considering asking the who feel differently. They tend to be
claims that the permits deter crime. to be defenseless.” 2013 Legislature to increase the new to this and maybe a little more
Burlington Coat Factory in the East- “It’s hogwash,” said Birzer, who Dirk Sanders, number of investigators from two to apprehensive. There are others (who
gate Mall, at Kellogg and Rock Road. spent nearly two decades with the three, spokesman Don Brown said. have carried for a while) who want
Police allege Jacobs entered the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office. concealed-carry instructor Some of the main reasons an appli- to keep it low key, and keep it confi-
store and fired one round from a .38 That doesn’t keep people from cation is rejected are that the person dential.
revolver from 6 to 8 feet away at a thinking otherwise. has been convicted of a felony, mis- “But the Brady bunch considers all
store security guard after the guard The D&M Barber Shop in Derby is demeanor domestic battery or drug of us who carry to be some kind of
questioned him about a soda that he one of a number of businesses in the “But what if someone walked in charges. Applicants who have been criminal or radical, which is statis-
had taken from a store case and was area that have a sign posted that that door and tried to rob the cash committed to a mental institution or tically ridiculous.”
drinking without paying for it. The welcomes concealed-carry permit register? Can they hit a shot from the are under a court restraining order Sanders strongly urges permit
gunman also pointed the gun at holders to come inside. The signs back table without hitting the wrong for harassing or stalking also are holders to continue training with a
three others nearby, police say. No also include a message in red letter- person? That’s my concern.” turned down. handgun beyond the initial eight
one was hurt. ing that reads, “Criminals Beware!” Concealed carry is completely hours required to get a license. Wich-
Jacobs is set for a jury trial Dec. 17. “Sure, it helps deter crime,” said Increase in permits different from open carry, a topic ita’s police academy requires 84
One of the arguments that supporters Vu Nguyen, owner of now being debated by the Wichita hours of firearms training over 23
of concealed-carry permits like to make the shop. “Every day Only two states – Wisconsin and City Council. weeks, Lt. Jeff Allen said.
is that license holders are more law- people walk by, tap Illinois – hadn’t adopted some In July, the City Council passed an Tony Palbicke, a criminal justice
abiding than the general population the sign and give it a form of concealed-carry laws when ordinance allowing residents to instructor at Washburn University,
because they’ve undergone background thumbs-up. We have Kansas passed its in 2006. Wiscon- openly carry firearms. Residents can has 25 years’ experience as a police
checks by the state. There aren’t any a lot of cops come in sin later passed a law, leaving Illi- carry firearms in plain sight, without officer in the Chicago area – work-
crime statistics that correlate with all here. We don’t want nois as the only state without one. a permit or training, a change that ing in the one state that prohibits
the parameters set for a person to qual- bad guys here.” Concealed carry is also prohibited in was made to comply with state law. concealed carry.
ify for a concealed permit, but the vio- Derby Police Chief the District of Columbia. The council is investigating options “The problem is people aren’t
lent crime rate in Kansas in 2011 was Robert Lee, one of Florida became one of the first to regain local control of open carry- trained,” he said. “It’s not just about
one for every 198 people at least 21 Nguyen’s customers, Nguyen states to have a concealed-carry law ing of firearms. how to handle the weapon. After the
years old, or 0.5 percent, according to doubted if the sign when it passed one in 1987. The first hour of training, you can shoot
the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. would make someone think twice state has since issued more than Ongoing training straight. But they aren’t trained
“Just because someone has a con- about holding up the shop. 2 million permits, and nearly when to defend themselves.
cealed-carry license, there’s really no “It may discourage some of the 1 million people still hold a permit. Daniel Vice, senior attorney for the “As a police officer, I’d vote no
guarantee that person can’t snap at amateurs,” he said, “but we have Kansans can lose their permits for Washington, D.C.-based Brady Cen- against concealed carry. It compli-
some point,” said Patricia Stoneking, banks robbed with guards inside. I’ve a variety of reasons and for different ter to Prevent Gun Violence, said it’s cates the job and puts officers’ lives
president of the Kansas State Rifle worked cases where we’ve had gun lengths of time. misleading to limit the list of revoca- at risk. I like to put my trust in the
Association, the National Rifle Asso- shops robbed where everyone inside Some have their licenses revoked tions and suspensions of concealed- cops.”
ciation’s state affiliate. “There are has guns.” because they move out of state. Oth- carry permits to only those who have There has been anecdotal evidence
bad apples in every basket.” Paul Cohlmia has the sign welcom- ers simply don’t renew their licenses. committed a crime with a firearm. that permit holders have prohibited
But she said it would be wrong to ing concealed-carry permit holders A DUI conviction draws a one-year “It understates the problem,” he crime from escalating, including an
take those incidents and use them as at his two Riverside Cafe locations in revocation. Conviction of a felony said. “You don’t want a domestic incident last month in Wichita.
reasons to curtail gun rights. Wichita and the one in Derby. where a firearm was not used will abuser armed just because they ha- Steve Yager, a 65-year-old permit
“You don’t punish the populace by “I’ve only had one person object to bring a revocation of five to 10 years. ven’t shot anyone yet. If they are holder, was about to open his Club
restricting their liberties because the sign,” he said recently while at Conviction of a felony while using beating their wife, odds are they are Billiards in the Delano neighborhood
somebody might do something the Riverside restaurant on West a firearm brings a lifetime revoca- going to shoot her eventually.” on Oct. 1 when a young man ap-
wrong,” Stoneking said. “If we were 13th Street near North High School. tion. Aggravated battery is the lead- Vice also takes issue with Kansas proached him. The man said he had
going to do that, we’d take cars away “She said she wouldn’t come back, ing cause for revocation in Kansas. and other states that don’t make a gun and asked Yager for his bill-
so people won’t have the opportunity but Riverside is more liberal. That While Kansas has issued a little their lists of concealed-carry permit fold.
to drive drunk.” wouldn’t happen at the Derby or over 51,000 permits, 48,200 people holders public. Kansas only allows Yager pulled out his .38 revolver
Gun-rights backers point to exer- Woodlawn (sites).” hold one now, according to the at- the names of those who have had instead, and the would-be robber ran
cising constitutional rights, personal John O’Grady was focused on his torney general’s office. There are their licenses suspended or revoked off.
safety and deterrent to crime as laptop as he sat at a back table at the 9,813 license holders in Sedgwick to become public. Palbicke, however, said the com-
reasons to carry a concealed hand- restaurant. County. “Because of the secrecy law,” Vice munity’s safety would be better
gun. “I come here because the food is Interest in obtaining a permit has said, “we can’t know if the state is served if people would concentrate
“The main reason people get a good, it’s cheap, and the Internet is spiked recently. More than 12,400 even doing its job of revoking licens- on being good witnesses at the scene
license is because this is a broken always up,” he said. Kansans applied for a license be- es of lawbreakers. If the gun lobby of a crime.
world, and we don’t want to be de- The sign out front welcoming tween July 1, 2011, and June 30, really believes what they’re saying, “Someone comes in to rob a bank,
fenseless,” said Dirk Sanders, a state- concealed-carry permit holders isn’t 2012, a 24 percent increase over the why would they hide the informa- get on the floor,” he said. “Let them
certified concealed-carry instructor part of the attraction. previous fiscal year, the attorney tion?” get away with the money and worry
from Rose Hill. “I’m OK with concealed carry if general’s office said. Sanders, the concealed-carry in- about it later.”
Critics of concealed carry take people keep a level head,” O’Grady Women have shown a high in- structor from Rose Hill, said he has
issue with claims that those with said. “And I like the idea they have to terest, with nearly 2,500 applying in no problem with anyone knowing he Reach Rick Plumlee at 316-268-6660 or
permits help reduce crime. go through some training. 2012, a 57 percent increase over last carries a gun. rplumlee@wichitaeagle.com.
Greeks mark
AROUND THE WORLD
the uprising.
Storm-ravaged areas in
New York face bulldozer
U.N. demands end
anniversary of to fighting in Congo
student uprising UNITED NATIONS — The
U.N. Security Council is de-
ATHENS, Greece — Greeks manding an immediate stop
took to the streets by the tens to the violence in eastern By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM be razed, according to the commis- torn down were built more than a
of thousands on Saturday to Congo and says it will in- New York Times sioner, Robert LiMandri. half-century ago as summer bunga-
commemorate the 39th anni- crease sanctions against reb- LiMandri, in an interview late last lows, then winterized and expanded.
versary of a deadly student els who attacked the Congo- EW YORK — New York City is week, said the city had not undertak- Current building codes would likely
uprising against the country’s
former dictatorship.
While the marches went on
peacefully, clashes between
anarchists and police erupted
lese army.
The Security Council
held an emergency meeting
on Saturday, after M23 reb-
els, backed by Rwandan forc-
N moving to demolish hundreds
Low water levels could halt barges Six weeks and done for
BY JIM SALTER AND JIM SUHR Two barges
fill-in Mich. congressman
Associated Press head north on BY HENRY C. JACKSON Curson did not run for a full
the Mississippi Associated Press term, only opting to run in the
ST. LOUIS — The gentle whir of River past St. special election after other Dem-
passing barges is as much a part of life Louis on WASHINGTON — Driving from ocrats took a pass.
in St. Louis as the Gateway Arch and Monday. Barge Michigan in his Ford F150 pick- The seat was left vacant when
the Cardinals, a constant, almost companies are up truck, David Curson arrived Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, a Re-
soothing backdrop to a community concerned that in Washington a week ago. He publican, quit Congress during
intricately intertwined with the Mis- drought will set up an office last Sunday, was the summer after he failed to
sissippi River. cut navigation sworn in as a congressman on qualify for the ballot because of
But next month, those barges packing south of St. Tuesday and by Friday had questions about petition signa-
such necessities as coal, farm products Louis. logged his first votes and given tures.
and petroleum could instead be parked Jim Suhr/ his first floor speech – one that Democratic House leader Nan-
along the river’s banks. The drought that Associated Press stretched a bit past the one min- cy Pelosi and Rep. John Dingell,
has gripped the Midwest for much of the ute he’d been allotted. D-Mich., have lent Curson staff
year has left the Mississippi critically low The 64-year-old Democrat has to help him with the brief learn-
— and it will get even lower if the Army no time to waste. In six weeks, ing curve he has. In just days, he
Corps of Engineers presses ahead with nization representing ports and ship- The Missouri flows gently into the he’ll be gone. assembled a nearly full staff,
plans to reduce the flow from a Missouri ping companies. “It is an economic Mississippi around a bend just north of St. In Congress’ packed lame-duck including his own chief of staff
River dam. crisis that is going to ripple across the Louis. From there, about 60 percent of session, Curson is a curiosity. and communications director.
Mississippi River interests fear the nation at a time when we’re trying to the Mississippi River water typically He was one of four members Curson, an ex-Marine and
reduced flow will force a halt to barge focus on recovery." comes from the Missouri. This year, the of the House sworn in this past United Autoworkers union rep-
traffic at the river’s midpoint. They At issue is a plan by the corps to signif- Mississippi is even more reliant on Mis- week to fill a partial term, but resentative, said he knows he’s
warn the economic fallout will be icantly reduce the amount of water re- souri River water — 78 percent of the he’s the only one who didn’t win arrived in Washington at an
enormous, potentially forcing job leased from the Gavins Point Dam near Mississippi River at St. Louis is water that a full, two-year term to go with important time. He’s keen to
cuts, raising fuel costs and pinching Yankton, S.D., a move to conserve water originated from the Missouri. the temporary gig. In January, play whatever role he can as
the nation’s food supply. in the upper Missouri River basin. The The Mississippi is so low there now he’ll drive his truck home and be Congress seeks to navigate the
“This could be a major, major im- outflow, currently at 36,500 cubic feet that if it drops another 5 feet, barge replaced by Republican Rep.- fiscal cliff and a slew of other
pact at crisis level," said Debra Col- per second, is expected to be cut to traffic may shut down from St. Louis elect Kerry Bentivolio, whom thorny, year-end issues.
bert, senior vice president of the Wa- 12,000 cubic feet per second over several to the confluence of the Ohio River at Curson beat out for the partial So far, he says, it’s been a
terways Council, a public policy orga- days, starting Friday. Cairo, Ill. term. frenetic, enjoyable experience.
14A THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
Thanksgiving Day
Dinner
11am-4pm
Choice of
Roasted Turkey
Beef Tenderloin
It’s The Best Pizza You’ll Ever Eat! Grilled Salmon
with all the traditional trimmings
Any Menu Item $24 per person • Under 12 $10 • Under 5 FREE
(Excluding Thursday)
Thanksgiving Buffet
A Wichita Favorite
Olive Tree traditional Thanksgiving Buffet at Piccadilly
Carving station, appetizers, salads, wafÁes,
breakfast bar, dessert bar, Lebanese specials,
and all your Thanksgiving favorites.
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11am - 2pm
Call 687 - Mill For Rez
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WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 15A
16A THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
OPINION
Founded 1872
Kim Nussbaum Sherry Chisenhall Phillip Brownlee
President & Publisher Editor & Senior VP News Opinion Editor
OPINION
Kansas politics is U.S. is a debt-a-holic
not in mainstream BY CAROLINE BAUM
Bloomberg News
BY GWYN MELLINGER the fore, largely the result of
uncompromising positions Earlier this year, a group of longtime deficit
Here on the plain, an- articulated by Republican hawks came together to try to accomplish E-mail comments, 50 words or
chored in the wash of neon candidates in Missouri and what has eluded their predecessors for so fewer, to opline@wichitaeagle.com.
red on the U.S. electoral Indiana who believe abortion long. Unveiled at the Nation-
map, some Kansans feel should be outlawed even in ■ ■ ■
al Press Club in Washington,
insulated and others feel cases of rape. Suddenly, D.C., on July 17, the group I would like to see the re-
isolated national outrage was focused had a new name (the Cam- sults of an election in which
from the on a position that is accom- paign to Fix the Debt), some the right to vote was restricted
outcome of modated by the Kansas GOP old faces (Erskine Bowles, to those who pay taxes and
the 2012 platform. Alan Simpson, Pete Peterson, aren’t on welfare.
general Similarly, the GOP plat- Alice Rivlin), and all of the
election, form is at odds with apparent ■ ■ ■
familiar platitudes associated
which re- momentum in favor of mar- with previous efforts to put It’s the policies, stupid.
turned a riage equality. Since 1998, Will CEOs pledge to forgo all lobbying that
Democrat to voters in 30 states, including
Baum the federal budget on a sus- benefits their particular company and ■ ■ ■
tainable path: a “nonpartisan industry?
the White Kansas, have erected barriers coalition” working to replace “temporary Mitt Romney wined and
Mellinger
House and to same-sex marriage. But on patches” with a “comprehensive solution” the Oct. 25 call, I asked Honeywell’s Cote if dined mega-millionaires and
failed to give Republicans Nov. 6, even as voters in that will “grow the economy” and “protect the CEOs would sign a pledge to forgo all CEOs to help pay for his failed
control of the U.S. Senate. Salina and Hutchinson the most vulnerable.” lobbying that benefited their particular com- election. Now his whining and
Neither perspective serves hewed to this pattern by Pretty soon, chief executive officers of pany and industry. crying are just annoying and
the state’s best interests. By rejecting calls to add sexual major U.S. companies were signing on: folks “We all signed a pledge not to sign any make him look stupid.
imagining ourselves as be- orientation to those cities’ like Dave Cote of Honeywell, Andrew Liveris pledges,” Cote said, to background laughter. ■ ■ ■
yond the reach of national anti-discrimination policies, of Dow Chemical and Duncan Niederauer of On the Nov. 8 call, I asked a similar ques-
trends, Kansans of all stripes voters elsewhere may have Liberal zealots, the unin-
NYSE Euronext. By the end of October, the tion. After commending the CEOs for their formed and the willfully igno-
forfeit the opportunity to turned the tide. number of business leaders had grown to effort, I wanted to know what exactly they
participate in the political A final issue that sets us rant re-elected Obama. They
100. The campaign had a steering commit- proposed to do. will be the first to wail and cry
conversation that is shaping apart is the move by voters in tee, a citizens’ petition, a budget of $40 mil- Maya MacGuineas, president of the Com-
policy at the national level two states to decriminalize as jobs and the economy de-
lion and a set of core principles, starting with mittee for a Responsible Federal Budget and cline and inflation and the
and in states across the recreational marijuana. That the recognition that “our growing debt is a a leader of the campaign, said she was “en-
country. one of those states, Colorado, national debt climb. Maybe
serious threat to the economic well-being couraged by the level of outreach” on the then they will understand
The state’s political parties shares a border with Kansas and security of the United States.” part of business leaders, who are willing “to
are no help. Kansas Demo- makes this a particularly what Obama meant when he
It sounds a lot like a 12-step program for sacrifice for the good of the country.” said, “Elections have conse-
crats lack the vision and salient issue for us. It’s un- Debtors Anonymous, minus the Higher Pow- I still wasn’t hearing much about the “do”
voice to capitalize on wide- likely, however, that Kansas’ quences.”
er stuff. part. To what extent are CEOs, who are ac-
spread concern about Gov. political leaders will have the I don’t mean to belittle the campaign’s countable to their shareholders and focused ■ ■ ■
Sam Brownback’s extreme foresight to exploit the reve- noble intentions. Faced with automatic tax on their stock price, willing to “put national
policies on tax cuts and the nue opportunity that is star- Romney can’t take a hint.
increases and spending cuts on Jan. 1, Presi- interest ahead of special interests,” one of the He’s hanging around making
Affordable Care Act. ing them in the face, even as dent Obama and Congress need all the sup- key bullet points in the citizen’s petition?
Republicans, for their part, other states are sure to fol- excuses and claiming Obama
port, and cover, they can get to negotiate a For that matter, how many of the ordinary didn’t play fair. After lying to
want to double down. In- low in taxing legal marijuana short-term fix with enough enforcement Americans signing on to the Fix the Debt
deed, David Kensinger, sales. the American people through-
mechanisms to produce a long-term solution. initiative want to sacrifice their mortgage- out the entire campaign, sud-
Brownback’s adviser, told the Instead, we’ll be the state I’m just wondering why this time is different. interest deduction or exemption for employ-
conservative Wichita Pachy- whose lawmen patrol I-70 denly he’s the one who was
For example, Democrats and Republicans er-provided health care benefits? There is a wronged. An apology from
derm Club that the national looking to arrest eastbound already agree on, or pay lip service to, a “core constituency for every loophole. More than
GOP should follow the ex- travelers transporting small him is what would be appro-
principle” of tax reform: something that sim- half the lobbying in this country is related to priate.
ample of the Kansas party in quantities of marijuana plifies the tax code and raises revenue by the tax code.
order to win elections. across our border, on the way broadening the base and eliminating loop- Based on past efforts, and limited success, ■ ■ ■
Any hope that Kansas Re- home from ski vacations. holes that exceed $1 trillion annually. So why in attacking deductions and exemptions, the Many elected officials con-
publicans might have sensed But these are just a handful are they still talking about it this close to the best we can probably hope for is something tinue to behave as though the
a change in the national of examples. As Kansans fiscal cliff? Republican presidential nominee Mitt Rom- election did not happen. This
mood after Nov. 6 further reflect on the recent election, Answer: Because agreeing on principles ney proposed: a cap on itemized deductions will have a destructive impact
dissipated when Brownback it’s in our best interests to isn’t the same as closing a deal. To the 100 for high-income earners. If that’s what re- on America’s reputation as a
nixed the state insurance consider possibilities that CEOs who insist “everything is on the table,” form looks like, the tax code will continue to world power. One good way
commissioner’s plan to enter seem counterintuitive within where is one – just one – who says “here, encourage inefficient behavior to the detri- to ensure an attack upon our
into a federal-state part- the Kansas frame of refer- take this off my plate”? ment of the economy. beloved nation is to continue
nership for the implementa- ence. What the Nov. 6 elec- I participated in two conference calls spon- to perpetuate that our govern-
tion of the Affordable Care tion told us is that we are not sored by the Campaign to Fix the Debt. On Caroline Baum is a Bloomberg View columnist. ment is “divided.”
Act. As a result, the federal in the American mainstream
government will be running and that opportunities to ■ ■ ■
our insurance exchange. influence the political and Anyone but Obama would
Three other election out- policy conversations are be humbled by knowing 49
comes also suggest that Kan- passing us by. percent of the entire U.S.
sas is on the sidelines of voting population doesn’t like
national trends. First, during Gwyn Mellinger is chairwoman of him. His arrogance leaves zero
this election cycle, the issue the Department of Mass Media at space in his ego for humility.
of abortion rights came to Baker University in Baldwin City.
■ ■ ■
Residents of 50 states have
asked to secede from the Unit-
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Here’s a look at live stage shows for the holiday season specifically
geared to younger audience members.
“Santa’s Magical Christmas” (Friday-Dec. 15) at Crown Uptown,
3207 E. Douglas. Original holiday musical by the late Ted Morris that’s
become a local tradition. Friday and Saturday matinees only. Doors open
Jaime Green/The Wichita Eagle at 11 a.m., child-friendly lunch buffet at 11:15 a.m., show at 12:30 p.m.
Botanica’s Illuminations opens to the public on Tickets: $11.95 under age 12, $13.95 adults. Call 316-612-7696 or visit
Thanksgiving Day. View a photo gallery at Kansas.com. www.crownuptown.com.
“Babes in Toyland” (Dec. 7-9) for Music
A bright holiday
Theatre for Young People, performed at HOLIDAY THEATER
Mary Jane Teall Theater in Century II, 225
W. Douglas. Victor Herbert’s classic operet- PREVIEW
ta built around Mother Goose characters
mixed into a romantic holiday fantasy Visit Kansas.com/
season begins featuring beloved songs like “Toyland” and entertainment to find a
“March of the Toys.” Shows at 7:30 p.m.
Dec. 7 and 8, 2:30 p.m. Dec. 9. Tickets:
$12 adults, $10 students, available
through WichitaTix at 316-219-4849 or
recent roundup of holiday
presentations at Mosley
Street Melodrama, Cabaret
Oldtown, Crown Uptown
BY ANNIE CALOVICH AND LORI O’TOOLE BUSELT www.wichitatix.com. Theatre, Prairie Pines, The
The Wichita Eagle “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever” Forum Theatre and the
(Dec. 14-16) for Wichita Children’s The- Wichita Community Theatre.
otanica ramped up its Illuminations event last year by
B
atre and Dance Center, performed at Wich-
adding many thousands of lights and opening the ita Center for the Arts, 9112 E. Central.
gardens nightly through New Year’s. Funny and touching comedy about chil-
This year, Illuminations will have a new lighted dren reinterpreting what they think is the real meaning of Christmas
landscape: Candy Land. during a school pageant. For ages 8 and up. Tickets $6, ages 5 and
“It’s based around the board game,” Kristin Marlett of older. 7 p.m. Dec. 14, 1 and 3 p.m. Dec. 15, 2 p.m. Dec. 16. Call
Botanica said. 316-262-2282 or visit www.wctdc.com.
The new themed area will be in the Pinetum Gar- “Celebrate! A Christmas to Remember” (Dec. 12-13)
den and will include a gingerbread house, over- for Signature Theatre, performed at Scottish Rite Audi-
sized gumdrops and gingerbread-family cut- torium, 332 E. First St. Annual holiday musical revue
outs. showcasing patriotic and religious music, from pop
It’s among holiday events kicking off music to classical, from Christian to Jewish tradi-
around Wichita this week. Lights on St. tions. Shows at 7 p.m. Dec. 12 and 13, doors
Paul and Heartspring’s Lights on the open at 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $10, $7 students.
Lake, for instance — two Wichita drive- Call 316-263-4218.
through light displays that raise money “The Littlest Angel” (Dec. 15-16) for Wich-
for local nonprofits — light up for the ita Children’s Theatre and Dance Center,
season on Thanksgiving Day. (Find performed at Wichita Center for the Arts,
complete details about both in the 9112 E. Central. Charming, heart-touching
list that follows.) musical about a boy who arrives in heaven
Illuminations will be open nightly before his time and journeys back to Earth
from Friday through Dec. 30 (with to find the perfect gift for the baby Jesus.
the exception of Christmas Eve and For ages 8 and up. Tickets $6. Shows at 7
Christmas). p.m. Dec. 15 and 4:30 p.m. Dec. 16. Call
Other changes at Illuminations 316-262-2282.
this year: The light show in the
Meadow has grown upward with
lighted pole trees. More trees in the
gardens and more structures in the
children’s garden will be lighted, SUBMIT YOUR HOLIDAY EVENT
including the treehouse. And there Hosting or planning a Wichita-area com-
will be a North Pole post where chil- munity holiday event that is open to the pub-
dren can send their letters to Santa. lic? The Eagle wants to know about it. Submit
information about it to be considered for a future
Please see SEASON, Page 2C holiday events listings. You can do so for free on
The Eagle’s GO! Events searchable calendar at
events.kansas.com.
MORE HOLIDAY FUN Be sure to select “Holiday” as your main category.
See the Sunday Arts Calendar for informa- Please include as much information about the event as
tion about additional holiday-related events, possible. Missing information will cause the event to be
including concerts and theater productions. considered incomplete.
SEASON
From Page 1C
NOW PLAYING
CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATERS AND SHOWTIMES • NO PASSES ACCEPTED
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 3C
AUTHOR TALK
WHAT WRITERS ARE SAYING
“So few writers want to touch the subject of race and eth-
nicity. It makes people nervous. But that's what America is all
about. It's the great meeting place of people from all over the
world.”
Books teach
kids about
discovery ■
Imperiled by power
‘Former People’
“Penguin’s Hidden Talent” written and
illustrated by Alex Latimer (Peachtree Pub- charts the desperate
lishers, ages 3-8, $15.95) is a charming story struggle for survival of
of finding your personal worth. Russia’s aristocracy in
Everyone is practicing for the big talent
show. Bear juggles. Rabbit does magic tricks. the face of evil.
Fox burps the alphabet! Penguin resigns him-
self to helping with the show since he can’t
find a talent. BY GAYLORD DOLD
Alex Latimer is a wonderful writer. His per-
fect blend of sparse text and color-filled line “Former People” by Doug-
drawings present a complete story. Not only las Smith (Farrar, Straus and
does he leave out unnecessary words, he rare- Giroux, 464 pages, $30)
ly illustrates a detail that is not needed.
Despite a hugely successful show, Penguin is he sudden disintegration
sad that he did not win a medal. His friends
throw him a party for doing a great job. What
a disaster! Only when Penguin organizes his
own thank you party does he realize the value
of his own talent.
T of the Soviet Union in
1989 opened many of its
locked and shuttered
government archives, libraries
and spy vaults to historical
■ ■ ■ view.
“I Like Old Clothes” by Mary Ann Hober- Building on the epochal work
man (Random House, ages 4-8, $16.99) is a of Alexander Solzhenytsin and
re-issue of the Robert Conquest, a number of
1976 edition Russian-speaking historiogra-
with new phers and researchers have
updated illus- delved since into totalitari-
trations by anism’s vilest and most shame-
Patrice Bar- ful secrets, producing revolu-
ton. tionary insights and perspec-
A young tives, as well as classic books
girl likes “old that will live forever. Scholars
clothes, like Orlando Figes (“People’s Courtesy photo
Hand-me- Tragedy: The Russian Revolu- Few monuments to the Russian aristocracy remain after Stalin’s bloody rise to power in the
down clothes, tion”), Simon Montefiore (“In early 20th century.
Worn out- the Court of the Red Tsar”) and
grown
CHILDREN clothes, Not-
my-own
Timothy Snyder (“Bloodlands:
Europe Between Hitler and
Stalin”) not only clarify our
their children, danced and
dined, and generally lorded it
over the serf-peasants who
burned to the ground, along
with countless art objects,
furniture and priceless librar-
clothes.” She expounds upon the many fun understanding of the commu- worked the lands and paid ies. They themselves were
ways to use and wear old clothes and wonders nist world-project, but deepen rent. hunted like animals, though
where various pieces of clothing have been in our understanding of human They held life and death in there was a brief respite during
the past. nature and our intimate their hands, and theirs was a the mid-1920s, when Lenin
Mary Ann Hoberman’s text rings true for 2-million-year connection to charmed existence, one lived was dead and the government
readers today with her lyrical rhythms and evil. despite the clear presentiment was seeking a new beginning
rhymes. The beauty of this new edition is the Douglas Smith’s “Former of disaster after a series of for communism.
illustrations by Patrice Barton. Modern set- People” is such a work – one peasant uprisings, assassina- Stalin, killing his way to
tings with soft pencil drawings and mixed of profound historical under- tions and revolutions which power, raised the ante consid-
media help the reader almost feel the clothing. standing, deep sympathy with shook, but did not destroy, the erably. A new constitution
Today’s young readers will love the old, but social and moral problems, and autocracy represented by Nich- created The Great Break with
new, edition of “I Like Old Clothes”. care for detail both in the natu- olas II, an ineffective dunder- the past, as Five Year Plans
■ ■ ■ ral environment of culture and head whose entire family man- from 1928 on industrialized
“Lost and Found” written by Bill Harley personal psychology. aged to tunnel beneath knowl- the state and created huge
and illustrated by Adam Gustavson (Peachtree Smith, an award-winning edge to reach the rock-bottom prison-garrisons where slaves
Publishers, ages 5-10) explores one of the historian and translator as well of superstition in the person of built canals, dug for diamonds
great mysteries of grade school: Lost and as a former employee of the the mystic and seer Rasputin, and felled forests to finance
Found. U.S. Department of State and who managed the Empress’ factories and armaments. Leg-
Justin has lost his hat. He looks everywhere Radio Free Europe, writes in mind. islation made the aristocracy
– on the playground, in his classroom – to an engaging but challenging Choosing two aristocratic as marvelously compelling to an outcaste of “former people”
no avail. His grandmother, who made the hat, style that brings alive an entire families, the Sheremetovs and read as it is distressing. During with no rights, not even the
is coming to visit, so he must go to the dread- way of life – that of the Rus- the Golitsyns, Smith manages the February revolution of right to eat, work or have a
ed lost-and-found. This means talking to the sian aristocracy balanced on to create an atmosphere of 1917, the cards were on the home. On the run, those who
even more dreaded grumpy old Mr. Rumkow- the knife-edge of doom, illumi- engagement in the reader who, table, and by the October Bol- remained lived in hovels,
sky. nating an ancient tradition by the end of the book, feels as shevik coup d’ etat, all the no- begged for food and dreaded
The story by Bill Harley may appear to start about to be eradicated from though he knows these people. bles, counts, princes and their the Gulag or typhus. Only a
slow, but that is largely because so many de- the face of the Earth by Marx’s The Sheremetovs were boyar cohorts were on the run from few survived, and those who
tails (like Justin’s hat missing the fuzzy red march of history and class by birth, courtiers who had social revenge at the hands of did only suspended above the
ball on top, and Mr. Rumkowsky’s decades as struggle. descended from Ivan the Ter- the peasants, soldiers, workers abyss on the slenderest of
the school janitor) are needed to prepare the Former people are the Rus- rible’s father, interested in the and political commisars. threads.
reader for the powerful ending. The artwork sian nobility, some 2 million of army and state politics. By During the Civil War “Former People” is a great
by Adam Gustavson is bright and detailed. whom occupied a distinct so- contrast, the Golitsyns were (1918-22) some nobles fled to book, a feat of scholarship and
Once Justin visits Mr. Rumkowsky, he goes cial class at the turn of the relative progressives with an Crimean spa towns or to the a dramatic triumph. At its core
on an almost mystical trip to the bottom of the 20th century and who formed intellectual turn, many serving Soviet near east, hiding out in is the problem of evil, a prob-
huge lost-and-found box. Justin not only finds the backbone of the tsarist civil as explorers, linguists, artists, villas or villages. Many fled to lem as puzzling and profound
the hat that Grandmother had made, he administration, scientific en- and musicians, while maintain- Europe, while others psycho- as the universe itself and
makes a good, new, old friend. deavor, exploration, the Army ing their links to the civil and logically were unable to leave which, unlike the mystery of
and agricultural pursuit. They political administration of their homeland because of the galaxies, lies at the core of
Steve Johnson, a former teacher, librarian and were fabulously rich and lived Tsardom. One or two members familial or patriotic reasons. human nature.
professional storyteller, is director of United Methodist a life of luxury on unimagin- of the families intermarried. Huge pogroms and riots swept
Campus Ministry in Hays. ably huge plantation estates, “Former People is, however, the land, and most of their Gaylord Dold is a professional writer
where they summered, raised a great and depressing tragedy, great estates were looted and living in Wichita.
NEW & RECOMMENDED ‘May We Be Forgiven’: Sweet and sour BEST SELLERS
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He moves through it all in a
From Publishers Weekly
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FICTION
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■ "The Patriarch: The Remarkable Life and “May We Be Forgiven” begins at boarding calls him a moron; one woman solver
Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy" by a Thanksgiving celebration in an school to sit he’s sleeping with calls him 4. “The Sins of the Mother” by Danielle
Steel
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unrestricted access to the Kennedy papers, Nasaw community. It’s Cheever country doomed The story is so fast-moving and ling
strives to tell the full story of the founder of the 20th with a black comedy upgrade. mother. pushes its characters to such ex- 6. “The Panther” by Nelson DeMille
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Watermark Bestsellers 15 pages: Successful television might, he zone that’s a farcical hyper-realism. 8. “The Bone Bed” by Patricia Cornwell
1. "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald executive George gets into a car cleans up Among book critics, the ques- 9. “Winter of the World” by Ken Follett
2. "Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and accident, killing two parents and after the tion of ambition and execution
America’s Most Perilous Year" by leaving their son an orphan. family dog and feeds the cat. As a sometimes crops up: Which is NONFICTION
David von Drehle While George is away under ob- character in an A.M. Homes story, better, a perfect novel or an im-
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4. "Flight Behavior" by Barbara Kingsolver soles Jane, his sister-in-law; be- and starts using online personals The consensus is that risks and Ina Garten
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6. "Cold Fury" by T.M. Goeglein together. When George returns housewives. with them create a more interest- 3. “No Easy Day” by Mark Owen
7. "Barefoot Contessa: Foolproof" by Ina Garten home to find the two of them in Homes has specialized in discom- ing read than a polished novel 4. “I Declare” by Joel Osteen
5. “Guinness World Records”
8. "The True Night Before Christmas" by Vanessa bed together, he bashes Jane’s fiting visions of American suburbia: with no loose ends. 6. “The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook” by
and Robert Condreay head in with a bedside lamp. “The End of Alice” paired a willing “May We Be Forgiven” has me Deb Perelman
9. "Dancers Among Us" by Jordan Matter With Jane comatose in the hos- college student with an imprisoned wondering where I stand. Frus- 7. “The Signal and the Noise” by Nate
10. "Back to Blood" by Tom Wolfe pital and George locked up, Harry pedophile; “The Safety of Objects” trated by the sugary end grafted Silver
moves into their house to hold included stories of erotic fascination onto the raucously sour begin- 8. “The Last Lion” by William Manches-
— Source: Watermark Books & Cafe things together. His niece and with a child’s doll and a crack-smok- ning, I want this novel to be just a ter
nephew, 11-year-old Ashley and ing yuppie couple. Homes’ work is little more perfect. 9. “The Digest Diet” by Liz Vaccariello
4C THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 5C
“GRIPPING”
TV GUIDE
CARMINA BURANA
BLUE JEANS (GENERAL ADMISSION)
Friday, November 16 at 8pm
“BURNS [BRINGS] OUR CLASSICS (RESERVED SEATING)
NATIONAL PAST TO LIFE” Saturday, November 17 at 8pm
Sunday, November 18 at 3pm
THE BALTIMORE SUN Century II Concert Hall
Monica Yunus | soprano
Matthew DiBattista | tenor
Dan Kempson | baritone
Wichita Symphony Orchestra Chorus
A STORM IS COMING. Wichita Community Children’s Choir
Bethel College Concert Choir
Friends University Singing Quakers
Orff: Carmina Burana
Haydn: Symphony no. 90
(November 17 & 18 only)
Underwritten by
The S.M. & Laura H. Brown Charitable Trust
KNSS 1330/KEYN 103.7/KFBZ 105.3
Soprano Monica Yunus
pbs.org/dustbowl
*
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8C THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
SUNDAY’S PUZZLES
BRIDGE/FRANK STEWART NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD
Unlucky Louie’s team had BOTTOMS UP! By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited by Will Shortz 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
lost a big match, and as usual,
he blamed his bad luck. 17 18 19 20 21
"Our opponents played
22 23 24 25 26
better than we did," Louie
sighed. "Nothing is unluckier Across 4 8 Tu s k e d a n i m a l 84 “Really?” 4 Angry slight? 27 28 29 30 31
than that." 1 C o l l . s t u d e n t ’s 49 Periodic function 8 6 Wra n g l e 5 Assortment
"To win," I advised, "you declaration 5 0 Villa in o u s “ S ta r 87 Some Chi-town 6 S id e wa lk s q u a r e , e . g .
32 33 34 35
mustn’t let them play well." 4 Must Wa r s ” title tr a n s p o r ta tio n 7 The fox in Disney’s 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
Louie and his partner had 9 T h r e e - s t r i p e r s : Ab b r. 5 2 “ Qu o _ _ _ ? ” 88 Sizable garden “The Fox and the
reached four spades in three 13 Cut line 5 3 B a rg a i n b a s e m e n t 89 Silas of the Hound” 43 44 45 46 47
ANSWERS TO PUZZLES ON 8C
HIDATO NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PREMIER CROSSWORD
Y O B O N O R D S P I D I D O L
L L A Y I N G O R E I M E L O T A
N E T B T I N O A L D N O S T A C A T
O R E B R S O M G I A D Y A I N P N I
R I E S C R G V A T N S E N U
E N I R S N E U A E D E A C R S L E
R A P S A T S O H T A F D S O T E R
O M M A O L A Y H R S A R S H A H C
T R A P R E M O G E N S O S T H T A
S P V E G V O T N I S W J O B W E N
U T S C O A N O S F L U E
S E M N O Y G N Y O G R A N D D A T
O T A E R O S E N A T O S S L R R I
S I D V A R T H A D E N R S I A O B
I R E T T E T S R V E O E S T W O R
M T M S P T A Y U I G H L L O E T O
O T O T A T O T G A E T R Y R
E R T A R O N S T A P B E A C A K A T
R E S R I L A T E S D E A T T R N I A
A M U P T I K I O N L S O R U P O
R A C S S G T S T O S H A J A M
— PRINCIPLED IN DAYTON
DEAR PRINCIPLED: Good
Organ Series
high, never grow up and with anger and profanity manners dictate that when
always be dependent. Anywhen the boy made mistakes. you see them you be civil to
advice? It was finally interrupted by them. It doesn’t have to ex-
the mother, shouting for him tend beyond, “Hello. How are ChrisTMAs OrgAn COnCErT
— NO NAME IN THE to stop. He then screamed, you?” and moving on to talk
SOUTHWEST “Shut your mouth!” and she with other relatives — and it NOVEMBER 28, 2012 | 5:30-6:30pm
DEAR NO NAME: I agree responded, “Don’t you doesn’t indicate “acceptance.”
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10C THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
T R A V E L
Great airline fee grab penalizes travelers FLYING HIGH LOWEST ROUND-TRIP AIRFARES FROM WICHITA
Prices are for 14- or 21-day advance-purchase fares. They generally require a Saturday-night stayover.
ir travel is full of surpris- websites and to include any
A
Today’s fares were researched for departure on or after Nov. 15, 2012.
es, some good, many mandatory fees and taxes in
City Fare Carriers These fares, researched last Fri-
not. quoted fares. Atlanta $281 FL,DL day, are provided for informa-
Steven Allen says he It isn’t just ticket-change Baltimore
Boston
$330
$238
UA,DL,FL,AA
US,DL,UA,AA,FL
tion only. Airlines may drop or
change fares on a daily basis
got a bad one recently when fees that irk travelers. Legacy Charlotte $293 DL,AA,FL,UA without notice. Fares may not
he called to change a United airlines have added a variety Chicago $339 UA,AA,F9,FL apply to all seats on all flights
Dallas-Fort Worth $224 F9 and may be subject to advance
Airlines ticket from San Fran- of charges, for extras such as Denver $199 F9 booking, availability, payment
Detroit $500 US,UA,AA,FL,DL restrictions and penalties for
cisco to Puerto Vallarta, Mex- the first checked bag and seat Fort Lauderdale $311 UA,DL,FL,F9,AA cancellations or changes. Ex-
ico. To move his return date reservations. Some discount AA
CHRISTOPHER
Houston $311 tremely limited fares (including
Las Vegas $316 FL,DL,AA some weekend fares) may not
from Oct. 25 to Oct. 27, the carriers are more aggressive, Los Angeles $300 F9,FL,AA,US,UA,DL be included. Approximate taxes
airline wanted him to pay charging fees for carry-on Memphis $399 UA,AA,FL,DL and fees are included. The actu-
another $300, nearly half the
$686 airfare.
ELLIOTT bags and for the “conve-
nience” of booking through
Miami
Minneapolis-St Paul
New York
$311
$455
$326
UA,DL,AA
DL,F9
UA,AA,FL,DL
al taxes and fees will vary.
Airlines
Orlando $319 UA,AA,F9,FL,DL
Allen, a college instructor in
Berkeley, Calif., who like a lot
TRAVEL TROUBLESHOOTER their websites.
Together, those fees gener-
Philadelphia
Phoenix
$414
$230
UA,FL,DL,AA
AA,US,DL,FL,F9,UA
AA – American
CO – Continental
DL – Delta
San Diego $190 DL,AA,UA,US FL – AirTran
of leisure travelers isn’t fully A new survey underscores ated more than $10 billion for San Francisco
Seattle
$256
$358
UA,AA,F9,FL,US,DL
US,AA,UA,F9,DL
F9 – Frontier
G4 – Allegiant
aware of all the fees that air travelers’ dissatisfaction the airline industry worldwide St Louis $456 DL,AA,FL UA – United
Tampa $325 UA,DL,FL,AA
airlines now impose on pas- with the change. The poll, in 2011, according to a recent Washington $310 AA,FL,DL,UA
sengers, says that the sur- conducted by Harris Inter- study by the airline consul-
charge was unreasonable. “It’s active on behalf of Open Al- tancy firm IdeaWorks. For
disappointing,” he said. lies for Airfare Transparency, many airlines, the fees made
Other passengers are also suggests that many air trav- the difference between a
frustrated by airline fees – elers are clueless about fees. It profit and a loss.
specifically, by the fact that fees found that 94 percent of The problem is simple: In
are often poorly disclosed until Americans who’d recently deciding to shift to a fee-based
it’s time to pay them. (United’s used an online travel compa- system for airline tickets, airlines
website indicates that a fee “may ny to book their travel said did their homework, making
apply” for ticket changes, but it that all airline fee information sure that every step they took
offers no details.) should be available to travel was legal, though not necessarily
The domestic airline in- agents and online travel web- transparent.
dustry as a whole is in the sites, which isn’t the case now. The solution won’t be so
process of re-imagining its Airlines say that the current easy. It will take creative
business model, moving away rules are sufficient. Trans- regulations or new legislation
from one in which the price of portation Department reg- to overcome misleading air-
a ticket covers the basic cost ulations that took effect earli- line ticket prices. And both of
of air transportation to one in er this year require air carriers those routes mean that con-
which optional fees account to prominently disclose all sumers won’t see solutions for
for much of its profits. optional surcharges on their more than a year.
There’s always
room for seconds,
thirds, fourths...
Order extra copies of the 2012 Holiday Cookbook
to share with friends and family for only $2.50 copy!
Jay Galloway
remembered
as delightful,
kind man
BY AMY RENEE LEIKER
The Wichita Eagle
OBITUARY
shall miss him
Mr. Galloway forever. He’s a
dear heart.”
Jay Galloway,
Kansas oilman
TURKEY TROT ATTRACTS ROADRUNNERS
and ardent BY DAN VOORHIS now part of people’s active life-
supporter of local charities, died The Wichita Eagle style.”
Thursday following a battle with Paul Manning and Angelina To-
dementia. He was 84. here weren’t any turkeys at ben literally glowed as they just
Services are scheduled for 3
p.m. Sunday at East Heights
United Methodist Church, 4407
E. Douglas. A reception follows
at Wichita Country Club, 8501
T Cowtown on Saturday, but
there were plenty of roadrun-
ners.
The 37th annual Turkey Trot
brought out 1,600-plus runners for
stood, recovering after the race.
“It was a little scary at first. We were
near the front,” Toben said of the pres-
sure of the crowd behind them.
But after the first few minutes,
E. 13th St. its 2-mile and 10-mile runs. she said, the pack thinned out and
Mr. Galloway was born May The races start in a crowd and they loved being able to run com-
23, 1928, in Halstead to George end in ones and twos. As contes- petitively together. This was their
and Mae Galloway. As a teen, he tants finished 2 miles, the area grew first Turkey Trot.
attended East High School then crowded with exhausted runners. That’s not quite the case for Sally
Wichita State University. They swapped stories about the Ottaway and Chris Nickel, who ran
He soon transferred to the race, and accepted high fives and in the race years ago.
University of Oklahoma to pur- woo-hoos from supporters. “We used to be better,” Ottaway
sue petroleum engineering, Lots of children rode in strollers, said, laughing.
earning a degree in 1951. and even more ran or walked. But Nickel said that, for most Dave Williams/Correspondent
Three decades later, Mr. Gallo- “Running really has changed,” Two runners follow the bike path along McLean Boulevard during the
way took over his father’s oil said race director Clark Ensz. “It’s Please see TROT, Page 3B 37th annual Wichita Turkey Trot on Saturday near Cowtown.
business, Galloway Drilling Co.
A dedicated businessman, he
continued to spend time in his
office following his retirement.
He also visited The First Place
often.
“The girls here at the store
always called him Saint Jay,”
Kellogg crash reminder to buckle up kids
said Sue Dower, a store employ- BY TIM POTTER travel season, because as a ectiles. ger-vehicle accidents while In a Nov. 8 collision be-
ee and longtime friend of the The Wichita Eagle Wichita police lieutenant State data shows that al- not using seat belts or safety tween two vans on East
Galloways. “He was just a saint. overseeing traffic investiga- though most children in seats, according to data Kellogg, the force ejected
He was a delightful man when Joe Schroeder can’t stress tions, he sees consequences. accidents are using safety provided by the Kansas De- three of five children inside,
he came into the store.” enough that parents always “We have a problem with equipment, and that tens of partment of Transportation. apparently through a back
Mr. Galloway was an avid need to properly buckle their people buckling their kids,” thousands were unharmed in During the same five-year window of their van,
golfer, a member of Wichita kids into seat belts or safety Schroeder said, speaking to accidents while using seat period, 768 children suffered Schroeder said. One of the
Country Club and Sigma Nu seats. And that parents reporters after one of the belts or safety seats, there injuries in accidents while three siblings, a 3-year-old
fraternity and a fan of OU foot- should keep checking to latest tragedies. Just the still is a significant toll not strapped in, the data boy, died from massive head
ball. make sure their children stay other day, while off-duty, he among children not buckled shows. Seat belts and safety injuries. His 10-year-old
He supported several local clicked in. noticed a car passing him in. seats don’t always prevent sister suffered critical head
organizations, including East That message carries extra with two small children From 2007 to 2011, 18 deaths or injuries, but the injuries but has been
weight with Schroeder, espe- standing up in the back seat children — from infants to 12 equipment gives children a
Please see MR. GALLOWAY, Page 4B cially during the holiday — their bodies potential proj- years old — died in passen- better chance, officials say. Please see CRASH, Page 4B
2B THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
Benavente, Luz "Lucy," born Sept. 15, 1940, Fitchpatrick, Shatanya L. "Tiny," View obituaries online
*OBITUARIES* passed away Nov. 8, 2012. Ser- cosmetologist, born Feb. 20, Go to:
Baker, Alzadie Bessie vice 12 p.m. Friday, Nov. 23, 1979, passed away Nov. 12, Also, get directions to services, order flowers, donate
Barkett, Lucille Ablah New Beginnings 7th Day Adven- 2012. Services 11 a.m. Tuesday, to a charity,express condolences or share memories
Benavente, Luz "Lucy" tist, 209 W. 21st N. Survivors: Nov. 20, New Hope Missionary by signing the guest book.
Clough, Lindy daughters, Lisa Plunkett, Mi- The Wichita Eagle publishes a death notice for Kansas
Cramer, Katherine Nadine Baptist Church. Survivors: or former Kansas residents free of charge. Families
Derrington, Marveena (Sippel) chelle Brown; sons, Larry, Woo- husband, Byron D.; children, who choose to publish additional information may do
Ealy, Rosie drow and Roger Smith, Bennie Alajah, Byron Jr., Amaree; so for a fee. Obituaries are written and supplied by
and Robert Plunkett; sister, De- parents, Alphonso and Emma families and mortuaries. Pricing information can be
Emerson, Meddie Lou Nulph Kirkendoll obtained through your mortuary or by calling
Fitchpatrick, Shatanya L. "Tiny" lores Lopez; brothers, Antonio, Douglas; sisters, LaRhonda 316-268-6508. The Wichita Eagle reserves the right to
Forney, Brigadier Lewis M. Joe and John Benavente, Ralph, Martin and Rob- Douglas, Maurisa Baker, Felicia Douglas; edit, alter or omit any obituary. Deadline is 4 p.m.
Galloway, Jay ert Lopez; a host of grandchildren and great-grand- brothers, Clarence Linear, Charlie Dupree, Monday through Sunday.
Gonzales, Anacleto "Casey" children. Entrusted to Jackson Mortuary. www.th- Maurice Howard, Alphonso Douglas Jr., James
Kitterman, Leslie Ann Marcelle, Chipper, 47, ret. Security Guard at
ejacksonmortuary.com Ganti, Terrence Douglas; mother-in-law, Kathy Cornejo, died Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2012. Survivors:
Krause, Lorraine S.
Marcelle, Chipper Fitchpatrick; sister-in-law, NaTasha Wallace. wife, Shawnee; children, James, Gary, Toni;
Clough, Lindy. Memorial Services for Lindy Entrusted by Jackson Mortuary.
Mathews, Andrew Arthur Clough, 84, were held Saturday, www.thejacksonmortuary.com sisters, Penny, Randi. Memorial service 3 p.m.
McGaffin, John D. November 17, 2012 at Anderson- Monday, at Affinity Mortuary, 2310 E. Lincoln,
McGinn, Dorothy Wichita. Memorials to Chipper Marcelle, in care
Myers, Andrea Lynn Burris Funeral Home Chapel, Forney, Brigadier Lewis M., 93, was Promoted
Enid. Lindy married Naomi to Glory on November 15, 2012 of the funeral home.
Rucker, John L.
Saffier, Malvin J. "Mel" Clancy in 1951. They lived in in Wichita, Kansas. He was born
Shadid, Kathryn Kansas forty years, and then in Hutchinson, Kansas on August
Struthers, Carolyn "Dee" Diane Lindy retired as a facilities 14, 1919. He dedicated his life to
Taylor, Steven Lynn engineer at Boeing. He was a serving God by helping people Mathews, Andrew Arthur, age 51, Cessna
Teer-Lockett, Anita Jane member of Mulvane Lutheran through The Salvation Army. He Finance Corp. Vice President, passed away
Wasinger, Gerald E. "Jerry" Church, Past Master of Mulvane Masonic Lodge, was preceded in death by first November 15. 2012. Survived by his wife,
Werbin, Syd and a member of the Guthrie Valley Scottish Rite. wife Edith. Lew retired from Juliann, daughter, Sarah, parents, brothers, sisters
Wiseman, Loraine V. Lolmaugh Lindy is survived by son Steven of Wichita; and many friends. Further details to be announced
Wright, Pauline E. active service on August 31, 1983
brother Harry; three sisters, Hazel Rehm, Pauline and married Major Alta Kinney on October 8, by Watson Funeral Home. Share thoughts at
AUGUSTA - Redwine, Donna Elizabeth Weaver, and Aleene Bradshaw. He was preceded 1983. He is survived by his wife, Brigadier Alta watsonfuneral.com
BURRTON - Thach, Hazel Pearl in death by wife Naomi; two daughters, Rhonda Forney; three sons, Mr. Hal, Major Jerold and
DOUGLASS - Linot, Shirley L. Sue and Debra Lyn; his mother; and two brothers, Major Richard; eight grandchildren and eight
HAYSVILLE - Anderson, LaVaun Leonard and Loyal. Memorials are to Starkey, great-grandchildren. A viewing will be held at The
NORWICH - Maness, James P. "Jim" Inc., Wichita, Kansas or Dr. Dexeus Oncology. Salvation Army Citadel, 1739 S. Elpyco St. on McGaffin, John D., 87, retired Machinist for
SENECA - Skoch, Sylvester A. Condolences online at www.andersonburris.com Monday, November 19 from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm, Boeing passed away on Friday,
ST. JOHN - Mace, Lloyd Eldon followed by the funeral service on Tuesday at November 16, 2012. John was an
Cramer, Katherine Nadine, 81, passed away 10:00 am. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be Army WWII Veteran. He was
*LOCAL DEATHS* Saturday, November 3, 2012. made to The Salvation Army Wichita Citadel assigned to 1st infantry Division,
Fanska, Samuel "Sam," 88, died Nov. 14, 2012. Celebration of life will be Friday, Corps for music and youth ministries. Company F, 2nd Battalion and
Service 2 p.m. Monday, Lakeview Funeral Home. November 23 at 10:00 a.m. at Condolences 18th Regiment that landed on
Freeman, James B., 87, died Oct. 22, 2012. Services may be offered at
pending. Baker Funeral Home, Wichita. Cochran Mortuary, 1411 N. www.resthavenmortuary-cemetery.com Omaha Beach on June 9, 1944.
McCammon, Gay Elena, 55, died Nov. 11, 2012. Broadway. She is survived by He went through Huertgen Forest
Services at a later date. Affinity All Faiths Mortuary. three daughters, Linda (King) and was at the Battle of the Bulge.
Doolen, Pam (David) Bowring John was highly decorated receiving a Purple
*AREA DEATHS* both of Wichita and Susan Galloway, Jay, 84, well respected Wichita oil Heart w/ bronze cluster, EAME Ribbon w/Silver
ANDOVER - Jones, Heywood Francis, 82, died (Ennis) Sculley of Eudora, KS.; Star, Good Conduct Medal and Distinguished
Nov. 5, 2012. Services pending with Heritage three sons, John Cramer, Matthew Cramer both of man, loving husband and father,
passed away Thursday, Unit Badge. He was a longtime member of St.
Funeral Home, Andover. Wichita and Shain Cramer of Seattle, WA.; ten Cecilia Catholic Church in Haysville. Preceded in
AUGUSTA - Wills, Nell E., 95, died Nov. 17, 2012. grandchildren and four great grandchildren. She November 15, 2012. Service will
Service 1 p.m. Tuesday, Penwell-Gabel Cemetery, be at 3:00 P.M., Sunday, death by his parents John and Ota, his loving wife
Hutchinson. Headley Funeral Chapel, Augusta. was preceded in death by her husband, Don; November 18, 2012, at East of 60 ½ years Josephine, sons Doug and
EL DORADO - Johnson, Leroy, 78, died Nov. 15, daughter, Donna; grandson, David Jr. In lieu of Heights United Methodist Christopher McGaffin, brother William
2012. Service 10 a.m. Tuesday, Sunset Lawns flowers a memorial has been established with Church. Jay was born May 23, McGaffin, sisters Marilyn Rickett and Loetta
Cemetery. Heritage Funeral Home, El Dorado. American Cancer Society, 330 S. Main St. Ste 1928 in Halstead, Kansas to Wells. Survived by his children Janet Mila, Craig
EL DORADO - Parker, Vernon Dale, died Nov. 100, Wichita, 67202. To sign a guest book or leave George and Mae Galloway. He McGaffin (Connie), Joan Miller (Ray), Timothy
2012. Services pending with Heritage Funeral Home, a condolence for the family, go to McGaffin, (Kathy), Thomas McGaffin (Teri),
El Dorado. graduated from the University of Oklahoma in
www.cochranmortuary.com 1951. Jay married the love of his life, Helen, on Kirk McGaffin (Debbie), Mary Cassity, Alicia
EL DORADO - Swalley, Virginia Nina, 86, died Sanburn (John), brother-in-law Ray Conners,
Nov. 14, 2012. Services pending with Heritage February 25, 1976. Jay spent most of his life and
Funeral Home, El Dorado. career in Wichita and actively supported the sister-in-law Connie Conners, 24 grandchildren
GREAT BEND - Welch, Sylvia Ann, 79, died Nov. Wichita community through organizations and 13 great-grandchildren. Rosary, 7pm, Tues.
14, 2012. Services pending with Bryant Funeral Derrington, Marveena (Sippel), 75, loving wife, including East Heights United Methodist Church, Nov. 20th, Funeral Mass, 11am, Wed. Nov. 21st
Home. mom and grandma, went home to Wichita Crime Commission, Friends of both at St. Cecilia Catholic Church in Haysville. In
HUTCHINSON - Josephson, Megan, 28, died the Lord on Nov. 16, 2012. McConnell, Sooner Club of Wichita, and many lieu of flowers a memorial has been established
Nov. 13, 2012. Service 1 p.m. Friday, Elliott Preceded in death by husband of others. Jay is preceded in death by: his parents, with Catholic Charities 532 N. Broadway,
Mortuary. 21 years, Bill Sippel; together George and Mae Galloway; sister, Carol Hessling. Wichita, KS 67214. Condolences may be offered
HUTCHINSON - Storment, Becky Lynn, 48, died they owned Montague Studio. Survived by: his wife, Helen Galloway; children, at www.devorssflanaganhunt.com
Nov. 16, 2012. Service 10 a.m. Wednesday, Elliott Also preceded in death by Casey Galloway (Celia) of Scottsdale, AZ, Lance
Mortuary.
MILAN - Wacker, Dale Eugene, died Nov. 16, husband of 21 years, Jack Galloway (Jeni) of Topeka, KS, Buff Dodson of
2012. Service 11 a.m. Tuesday, Floyd Memorial Derrington. She is survived by Wichita, KS, Kara Haverty (Tom) of Leawood,
Chapel, at the Argonia (Kan.) Cemetery. Day children, Ed (Patty) Sippel of KS, Michael Galloway of San Diego, CA, Brad McGinn, Dorothy, beloved wife, mother and
Funeral Home, Wellington. Castle Rock, Colo., Lori (Don) Wiesner of Galloway of Partridge, KS and Kerrie Tonn of grandmother, died Nov. 15, 2012.
Wichita; and stepson, Janver (Khaila) Derrington Hutchinson, KS; brother, Tom Galloway of Funeral service will be held at 10
*The above Local & Area Deaths notices are of Carbondale, Colo.; 12 grandchildren; and 10 Oklahoma City, OK; sister, Ann Salome of A.M. on Monday, Nov. 19, 2012,
published at no charge in the newspaper. Free great-grandchildren. A private celebration of at the First Christian Church, in
death notices are not featured online.* Lawrence, KS; 14 grandchildren. Memorials have
Marveena’s life will be held at a later date. been established with: Wichita Center for the Arts, Sedgwick. Dorothy was born Jan.
Baker, Alzadie Bessie, retired Wesley Medical Arrangements with Resthaven Mortuary. 9112 E. Central Ave., Wichita, KS 67206; 15, 1931, in Caddoa, Colo., the
Central Services employee, born Condolences may be offered at GraceMed, 1122 N. Topeka St., Wichita, KS second daughter of Clyde and
June 4, 1927, passed away Nov. www.resthavenmortuary-cemetery.com 67214; East Heights United Methodist Church, Edna Owen. She attended nurses’
12, 2012. Service 11 a.m. 4407 E. Douglas Ave., Wichita, KS 67218. training at Halstead Hospital and
Monday, Nov. 19, 2012, Downing & Lahey Mortuary East. St. Joseph Hospital, and received her BSN in
Madison Ave. Church of Christ. nursing from Newman University. She worked as
Survivors: daughters, Linda C. Ealy, Rosie, loving mother, formerly of New Gonzales, Anacleto "Casey," 78, died Nov. 17, Director of Nursing and Assistant Administrator at
Crutcher, Shirley T. (Floyd) Orleans, La., passed away Nov. 2012. Friends may call 1 to 6 p.m. Tuesday, at Halstead Hospital, then went on to serve as
Powell; sisters, Katherine 13, 2012. Survived by children, Livingston Funeral Home; rosary 10:30 a.m.; Director of Nursing at Catholic Care Center. She
McGrary, Ruth Breckenridge; Ella Frances Hollins, Elois M. funeral mass 11 a.m. both Wednesday, at St. also worked as a supervisor at Riverside Medical
brother, Dale Garrison; grandchildren, Michael Williams-Bell (Elizah Bell), Patrick Catholic Church, Kingman; burial in Center and was a staff nurse at the Veterans’
Crutcher, Marc Powell, Corey Powell, Ginger Floyd Williams; sister, Ms. Walnut Hill Cemetery. He was born July 14, 1934, Administration Hospital in Wichita. She married
Powell-Baker, Carmen Powell-King; great- Shirley Gordon; 11 the son of Rudolph and Jesus Valadez Gonzales. A Kennith (Dutch) McGinn on Nov. 14, 1951. Their
grandchildren, Antwan, Aleah and Alonzo Hollie, grandchildren; 14 great longtime Kingman resident, he was a former union was blessed with three daughters, Debbi
Wesley and Chelsea Crutcher, Denarious, Corbin, grandchildren. Funeral service employee of KETCH and a member of St. Patrick (Jim) Elmore of Valley Center, Carleen (George)
Samauria, Schaeffer, Jaden and Jensen Powell, 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, at Greater Catholic Church. Survivors: brothers, Johnny, Currier of Sedgwick, and Candi (Jerry) Young of
Chela, Ravi and Nadira Baker, Shirley King. New Testament Baptist Church, Wichita. Pampi, Jesse and Ancel; sister, Lupe Gomez. rural Halstead. They all survive. She is also
Entrusted to Jackson Mortuary. Visitation with family 5 to 6 p.m. Monday, at Old Preceded in death by brother, Tony. Memorials to survived by seven grandchildren, Kelsi (Kevin
www.thejacksonmortuary.com Mission Mortuary, Wichita. Starkey, Inc., Harry Hynes Memorial Hospice and Gibbons) Currier of Austin, Tex., Chad (Shannon)
St. Patrick Cathiolic Church c/o the funeral home. Currier of Charlotte, N.C., Ryan (Gina) Currier of
Barkett, Lucille Ablah, 89, died Thursday, Nov. Louisville, Ken., Andi (Bill Dickey) Elmore of
15, 2012 at Catholic Care Center. Emerson, Meddie Lou Nulph Kirkendoll, born Kitterman, Leslie Ann, 43, passed away on Nov. Wichita, Jeremy Young, Justin Young, and Lesley
Trisagion and the funeral will be 16, 2012, at her home with her
on February 24, 1948 in Fresno, family by her side. Visitation will Young, all of Sedgwick, and five great-
at Saint George Cathedral, 7700 CA and died on November 11, grandchildren, Jackson and Madelyn Currier,
E. 13th on Sunday, Nov. 18 at 7 be held on Monday, Nov. 19,
2012 in Fresno, CA at the age of 2012 from 4-8 p.m. and funeral MacKenzie Dickey, and Grey and Kelsey
p.m. Burial will be at Wichita 64. Preceeded in death by father, Gibbons. She was preceded in death by her
Park Cemetery on Monday, Nov. service on Tuesday, Nov. 20, at 3
John B. Nulph; mother, Lillian p.m., both at Affinity All Faiths husband, Dutch, her sister, Mildred, and her
19 at 11:00 a.m. Lucille was born Jacqueline Pinkston Nulph; parents. Memorials are established with the
Dec. 19, 1922 in Wichita, KS to Mortuary, 2850 S. Seneca,
sister, Judith Lorraine Nulph; and Wichita, KS. Leslie was born on Salvation Army, 350 N Market, Wichita, 67202
Frank and Nellie Ablah. She both paternal and maternal and Caring Hands Humane Society, 1400 SE 3rd
graduated from the University of Wichita in 1945. March 5, 1969, to Phillip and
grandparents. Survived by Street, Newton, KS 67114. Tributes to the family
Following graduation, she stayed with Wichita children, James Mason Kirkendoll, Henryetta, Diana (Crow) Millis in Wichita, KS. Leslie retired via www.dlwichita.com
State, working in the Athletic Department. She OK, William "Glenn" Kirkendoll, Wichita, KS, from Puppy Parade as a dog groomer for 10 plus
married Milton Barkett on Nov. 23, 1952. They Alexis Louise Emerson, Wichita, KS, Shye Ann years. Leslie is preceded in death by her parents. Myers, Andrea Lynn, 31, was carried away to
lived in Buffalo, OK and Oklahoma City, OK until Lynn Emerson, Wichita, KS; brothers, William She is survived by her significant other, Chris heaven in the arms of God on
1959 when they settled in Wichita. She was "Bill" Mason Nulph and his wife, Regina of Kester, Wichita, KS; children, McKauley Tuesday, November 13, 2012.
employed at different times in several family Fresno, CA, John A. Nulph of Fresno, CA; sisters, Kitterman, Zachary Kitterman, Jessica Kitterman She is survived by her parents,
businesses, including Ablah Hotel Supply and Jacqueline "Doll" Rakowski and her husband, and Kelly Meehan all of Wichita; siblings, Tracy Brett and Tambra Myers; sisters,
Classic Real Estate. Lucille was a board member Ronald of Fresno, CA, Johnnie "Kay" Nulph of (Mark) Blackthorn, Jeff (Jeana) Millis and Adrienne Myers and Chelsea
of the Friends of the Wichita Art Museum and Fresno, CA, Judy Carvalho and her husband, Amanda Smith, of Wichita, KS. (Jeremy) Jantz; nephew, Tristan
volunteered for many of their activities. Through Joseph Carvalho of Clovis, CA; grandson, Kahler, niece Braelynn Jantz, all
the Art Museum, she met many friends with Michael Call-Kirkendoll of Fresno, CA; many of Wichita. She is preceded in
whom she greatly enjoyed traveling. She was a aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews and nieces; death by her grandmother,
member of the League of Women Voters, Project special friends, Robert and Louise Christian, Krause, Lorraine S., 74, born to Roy and Mary Jeannie Dillon. Visitation 9-10 a.m.; Service, 10
Beauty, and a long time volunteer for Meals on Darlene Schelsinger of Wichita, KS. Cathy (Fritz) Estes, passed from her a.m., Monday, November 19, both held at Central
Wheels. To her family, she was a loving wife, Mitchell of Fresno, CA and the father of her sons, earthly life into heaven Nov. 14, Community Church, 6100 W. Maple, Wichita,
parent, grandparent, big sister, close cousin, and Wallace "Sonny" Kirkendoll of Wichita, KS. 2012. She worked many phases Ks. Memorials to Cerebral Palsy Adult Day
favorite aunt. She became a grandparent late in Meddie was a 30 year employee of Via Christi St. in the restaurant business, Service. www.bakerfhvc.com
life, and made up for lost time with trips to Arizona Joseph Hospital in Wichita, KS. Many thanks to received her high school diploma
to visit her grandchildren. She was preceded in my collegues and friends who visited, called and at 58, and spent the rest of her
death by her husband, Milton, and parents, Frank kept me on their prayer lists. I loved my time at St. working years as a housemother
and Nellie Ablah. She is survived by sons, Henry Joseph Hospital. We will celebrating Meddie's life
and wife, Kim of Chandler, Barry of Kansas City, at the home of Tamara Perry in Fresno, CA on
with KETCH organization. She
loved cats and strongly supported
Please see obituaries, Page 3B
and Eric of Wichita; grandchildren, Sophia and Saturday, November 17, 2012 from 12pm to 3pm. the Humane Society. Survivors: daughter, Susan
Jack; brothers, George (Virginia), Don (Faith), If you would like to attend please call to get (George) Albertson; granddaughter, Lisa (Jay)
and Amil (Carol); and many nieces and nephews. address and details. 559-367-1848. Cremation Webster-Rollins; grandson, Carlton Albertson;
She will be dearly missed by all who knew and services provided by Yost and Webb and will be sister, Royena (Bob) Vandegrift; 1 niece; 4 When you don’t know what
loved her. Lucille will be remembered for her love followed by burial at Marshall Cemetery in nephews; 1 grand-niece; 4 grand-nephews. to say, light a candle...
and many acts of kindness. In lieu of flowers, Forum, Arkansas. In lieu of flowers, please send Services 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 19, at Grace Sign a guestbook at Kansas.com
memorials have been established in Lucille’s donations to Cancer Center, Victory In The Valley Baptist Church, 1414 W. Pawnee.
name at the Wichita Art Museum, 1400 West or Via Christi in Wichita, KS.
Museum Blvd, 67203 and Meals on Wheels, 200
S. Walnut, 67213. Downing & Lahey Mortuary
East. Memories are meant Be there, even when you
can’t be there...
Sign a guestbook at
to be shared... Sign a guestbook at Kansas.com
ple like Aaron Yoder, who was Running the shorter distance said. Diaz. They crossed the finish line Raquel Stucky described the
TROT first across the line in the
2-mile. An assistant track and
cross country coach at Betha-
is just part of his training pro-
gram. He’s trying to make the
Olympic trials.
The 10-mile race was a more
serious affair. Winner Bryant
Keirns of Haysville was running
together.
“He was just helping me
out,” Keirns said. “He’s a lot
10 miles that she flew through
as “a nice train.”
From Page 1B
ny College, he finished in “Tell people I’m a slacker for with his Oklahoma Christian faster.” Reach Dan Voorhis at 268-6577 or
9:52, coming in ahead of 919 only running two miles,” he University teammate Roberto And top female finisher dvoorhis@wichitaeagle.com
people, it’s really just a race other people.
against your expectations. He really didn’t even seem
“Unless you’re in front that winded and was trading
there’s no pressure,” she said. comments of “congratula-
“Those who win always win, tions” and “great race” with
so let them go.” other top finishers. He said he
She was talking about peo- ran the 10-mile race last year.
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SUNDAY
YOUR AUTHORITY ON WICHITA BUSINESS
CONTACT JULIE DOLL ■ 316-269-6706 ■ JDOLL@WICHITAEAGLE.COM
BUSINESS CASUAL BLOG
Check out our blog, Business Casual,
at blogs.kansas.com/business.
Confidence
rising for
buyers of
real estate
BY JERRY SIEBENMARK
The Wichita Eagle
A
“It’s baby steps,” he said. And while some
stirring again for the have been out front in their confidence has returned, he thinks tighter
wind energy industry opposition, saying that the tax credit conditions are making it difficult.
after months of sitting credits distort the free market. “I think we’ve swung too far and the
becalmed. The tax credit is worth 2.2 credit (requirements) are taking some
The election results have cents per kilowatt hour for good, potential homebuyers out of the
picked up the hopes of propo- wind power utilities. market,” said Ritchie, CEO of Ritchie Devel-
nents of wind energy for some In 2012, wind farm devel- opment.
kind of renewal of the most opers redoubled construction Longhofer asked panelists about down-
important subsidy for wind to beat the deadline, saving town redevelopment and if a saturation
power, the production tax little for next year. In Septem- point in housing was being reached.
credit. ber, Siemens Wind Energy “I don’t think we’re anywhere near the
The tax credit expires Jan. 1 announced that it would cut saturation point,” Martens, CEO of the
and the American Wind Energy 110 temporary contract work- Martens Cos., said. “I think over the next
Association has warned that ers at its Hutchinson turbine three to five years if you doubled the
the loss will lead to 37,000 plant immediately and lay off amount of housing downtown, the market
layoffs as demand for new 146 regular employees in two could absorb it very easily. I think the
wind turbines and wind farms months. The employees are quicker we can develop that … the better
drops sharply. scheduled for their last day the things happen downtown.”
Throughout the year, the on Monday, dropping File photo Ritchie added, jokingly, “I think all
U.S. House of Representatives, A finished wind turbine sits on the main floor of the Siemens Wind people should buy in the suburbs.” And
dominated by conservative Please see WIND, Page 6B Energy turbine plant in Hutchinson.
Please see BUYERS, Page 7B
WIND
From Page 5B
Retirement benefits mostly
employment from more than
400 this summer to about
150.
weathering the economy
Siemens announced last BY DIANE STAFFORD they consider retirement The Transamerica study
week that it has won con- Kansas City Star plans “an important tool for concurred with other reports
tracts for turbines destined attracting and retraining indicating that most Amer-
for southern California and Unlike many cost-cutting talent.” icans have saved far too
Chile that would keep the measures taken by employ- “Unfortunately, the reces- little for a comfortable re-
remaining workers em- ers during the recession, sion affected retirement tirement. As a result, work-
ployed. retirement benefits remained savings in other ways, as ers expect to keep working
File photo “mostly intact,” according to some workers had to dip longer.
Shifting mood Employment at Siemens Wind Energy in Hutchinson a survey released last week. into their savings, taking The survey found that 56
dropped from more than 400 this summer to about 150. The Transamerica Center loans or hardship withdraw- percent of workers plan to
But with the election, the for Retirement Studies, in its als from their accounts, in- work past age 65, and 43
political mood may be shift- Farm near Ellsworth. The is not renewed, Boyce said, 13th annual report, said cluding many who became percent plan to work past
ing enough to allow some wind farm has a 201 mega- the impact on the industry retirement benefits for Amer- unemployed and underem- age 70 or say they don’t plan
kind of short-term produc- watt capacity. depends on the circumstanc- ican workers “weathered the ployed,” the report said. to retire.
tion tax credit extension Kansas is slated this year to es. storm” over the last five
before the end of the year, roughly double its wind gen- The worst outcome would years, with some exceptions.
say industry officials. eration capacity to more than be if uncertainty hung over The main exception was a
President Obama, who
strongly backs alternative
2,000 megawatts. whether a tax credit or other
large incentive would be
continued decline in the
number of companies of-
STOCKS OF AREA INTEREST
energy, was re-elected. Re- Lame-duck deal renewed, he said. Wind farm fering defined-benefit, or Stock 52-week range Div. Last Chg.
publican candidate Mitt developers would hold back “traditional,” pension plans. AGCO
ALCS *
38.09 -54.00 0.00
6.18 -10.83 -
43.21 + 0.01
8.01 -0.14
STOCKS ON KANSAS.COM
Romney was far less commit- During a panel discussion to see if one would be en- Only 16 percent of compa- ATT 27.41 -38.58 1.80 33.14 - 0.28 The Eagle provides quotes and other
Abengoa 2.00 -17.86 - 2.0690 + 0.0210 information for thousands more stocks and
ted to it. And Democrats for lobbyists for the alterna- acted, killing any develop- nies provided such plans in AbtLab 52.05 -72.47 2.04 62.88 - 0.32
Aeroflex 5.00 -13.89 - 6.18 - 0.11 mutual funds at www.kansas.com/business.
added a few seats in the tive energy industry, hosted ment. 2012, down from 19 percent AirProd 76.11 -92.79 2.56 80.00 + 0.15
Amazon 166.97 -264.11 - 225.23 + 4.63 Limited
Senate and House of Repre- by Washington law firm If the tax credit were ended in 2007, the study said. AnadrkoPet 56.42 -88.70 0.36 70.09 - 0.29 37.57 -52.20 1.00 46.20 + 0.70
sentatives. Chadbourne & Parke, on Nov. and there were no chance of Over the same period there ArchDan 24.38 -33.98 0.70 24.96 + 0.48 LowesMGPIngrd
22.39 -33.63 0.64
2.98 -6.76 0.05
31.98 + 0.58
3.35 - 0.09
Avery23.98 34.17 -1.08 31.99 + 0.23 McClatchy 1.05 -3.06 0.00 2.86 - 0.02
The production tax credit 8, all of the participants fore- it returning, that would was an increase in the per- BarnesNob 9.35 -26.00 0.00 14.18 - 0.52 McDnlds 83.31 -102.22 3.08 84.12 + 0.07
BerkHa A 110,092.00 -136,345.00 - 129,344.90 + 1,166.90 Monsanto
has bipartisan support. For saw some kind of short-term clearer, he said. Developers centage of companies of- BerkHa B 72.60 -90.93 - 85.91 + 0.61 NetApp 67.09 -92.20 1.50
26.26 -46.80 -
85.23 + 0.57
30.26 + 0.06
Best Buy 13.52 -28.53 0.68 13.75 - 1.50
instance, Kansas’ two sena- extension of the production would make a call based on fering 401(k) or similar BkofAm 4.92 -10.10 0.04 9.12 + 0.03 NewellRub 14.22 -21.33 0.60 20.94 + 0.34
tors, both Republican, sup- tax credit. the availability of financing plans — from 72 percent to Boeing 62.12 -77.83 1.76 70.77 - 0.27 ONEOK
ONEX
38.52 -49.79 1.32
31.56 -40.90 -
45.66 + 1.01
39.76 + 0.30
Bombrdr 2.97 -4.93 - 3.12 + 0.13 OcciPet 72.43 -106.68 2.16 73.81 - 0.11
port its extension. "We are in a much better and the economics of the 82 percent — but the percent- CNH Gbl 34.36 -47.74 0.00 44.43 + 1.37
Cabelas 21.51 -56.78 - 45.02 + 0.72 OfficeDp 1.51 -3.81 - 2.79 -0.17
On Tuesday, Kansas Gov. position moving into the next location and market. age increase didn’t appear to CapFedF 10.76 -12.27 0.30 11.76 + 0.01 Penney
Pepsico
15.69 -43.18 0.00
62.15 -73.66 2.15
16.28
68.31 +
- 0.22
0.12
ChesEng 13.32 -26.16 0.35 16.62 + 0.23 Phillips 66
Sam Brownback and gover- Congress and in the lame Although the cost of gener- be because more companies ComcBnc 35.04 -42.74 0.92 38.07 + 0.76 Raytheon 28.75 -51.00 1.00 45.77 + 0.43
42.00 -58.68 2.00 54.46 + 0.46
nors from three other strong duck," Gregory Wetstone, ating wind energy has added plans. Conagra
ConocoPh
23.64 -28.80 1.00
50.62 -78.29 2.64
27.74 + 0.04 RentACt
55.03 + 0.44 RylCarb 31.22 -39.50 0.64 34.40 + 0.14
wind power states – two vice president for govern- dropped significantly, it is Rather, the report said, it ConsGph 21.76 -55.88 - 32.74 + 0.14 22.12 -35.16 0.48 33.09 - 0.63
CvntryHC 27.72 -44.26 0.50 42.41 + 0.01 SWAirlines 7.37 -10.05 0.04 8.93 + 0.09
Democrats and two Repub- ment affairs at wind farm still not competitive with the was “more likely attributable DeereCo 69.51 -89.70 1.84 85.25 - 0.14 Seaboard
Sears
1,805.00 -2,391.97 0.00 2,199.00
28.89 -85.90 - 47.49
0.00
- 10.99
Dillards 42.54 -86.71 0.20 83.53 + 0.95 SherwinWm
licans – again called on developer Terra-Gen Power, lowest cost energy. to the closings of unstable Eads 20.19 -31.69 - 25.17 + 0.08 SimonProp 82.35 -156.50 1.56 151.57 + 2.66
115.21 -164.17 4.40 146.92 + 0.19
Congress to extend the tax said at the time. The slow economic recov- companies that did not spon- Eaton
FGP
36.38 -53.06 1.52
10.20 -23.02 2.00
48.94 + 0.68 SmithF
15.75 + 0.23 SpiritAero 17.55 -25.12 0.00 20.83 + 0.33
credit. "We are looking at a two- ery and extremely low cost of sor a plan.” Ford 8.82 -13.05 0.20 10.50 - 0.07 13.96 -26.00 - 14.04 - 0.28
GM 18.72 -27.68 - 23.85 - 0.03 SprintNex 2.10 -6.04 0.00 5.48 - 0.06
Longer term, say industry step dance here where we get natural gas would continue The survey found that Gap 17.62 -37.85 0.50 33.59 + 0.33 Target
Textron
47.25 -65.80 1.44
16.86 -29.18 0.08
62.50 + 0.06
23.12 - 0.02
Garmin 34.41 -50.67 1.80 37.18 + 0.03
officials, the tax credit will a year or two, and then we to provide a significant chal- among workers offered a GenElec 14.68 -23.18 0.68 20.15 + 0.09 Tyson 14.07 -21.06 0.16 16.88 + 0.12
Umb Fn 33.05 -52.61 0.86 40.76 + 0.21
likely be part of a broader come back to the tax reform lenge to wind power without 401(k) plan, 77 percent GrayTV
HCA Holdings
1.34 -2.50 0.00
19.86 -34.32 0.00
2.07 + 0.04
30.50 + 0.58 UnionPac 95.15 -129.27 2.40 117.56 - 0.43
discussion to raise or restruc- debate," he said. the tax credit, Boyce said. continued to participate in Holly Frontier 21.13 -42.65 0.80 42.56 + 0.79 Valassis 18.32 -27.68 0.00 24.97 + 0.95
HomeDp 36.41 -64.44 1.16 62.12 + 0.87 Valero 19.12 -34.36 0.70 29.36 - 0.22
ture taxes next year. But they also didn’t foresee But at this point, those in the plan. That participation HonwlIntl 48.82 -63.89 1.64 59.15 + 0.23 Verizon
Vulcan
35.32 -48.77 2.06
29.35 -49.99 0.04
41.40
46.55 +
- 0.30
0.10
Hormel 27.28 -30.88 0.60 30.87 + 0.26
“I am optimistic that we much momentum for other the industry remain encour- rate held steady from previ- Hospira 26.92 -38.49 - 28.97 + 0.08 WaddellR 23.41 -34.57 1.00 32.23 - 0.65
WalMart 56.32 -77.60 1.59 68.03 - 0.69
will see a renewal of some incentives, such as federal aged by the political situation ous years. Jarden
JhnsnCntrl
28.66 -55.77 0.00
23.37 -35.95 0.72
51.09 + 0.14 Walgreen
25.09 - 0.02 WasteConn 28.53 -37.35 1.10 32.16 - 0.07
sort,” said David Boyce, CEO loans or grants, which were in Washington, although they But another challenge to KnkljkeP 17.16 -26.38 0.80 24.80 - 0.10 28.70 -33.94 0.40 31.11 + 0.34
Kroger 20.98 -25.44 0.60 24.52 + 0.14 Wells Fargo 23.19 -36.60 0.88 31.94 + 0.37
of Wind Capital Group. “That part of the 2009 stimulus remain watchful. the “mostly intact” conclu- LSI 5.06 -9.20 0.00 6.41 0.00 WestarEn 25.79 -33.04 1.32 27.90 + 0.38
LayneC 17.46 -26.80 - 21.02 + 0.16 YRC Wwde 4.56 -15.25 0.00 6.77 - 0.13
said, Congress has a lot left spending, or a national re- “I use this term ‘hunker- sion was a decline in the YumBrnds 52.54 -74.44 1.34 71.89 0.78
to achieve in the grand quirement for utilities to down mode,’ ” Boyce said. percentage of employers
scheme things. So I’m opti- have a certain percentage of “Let’s just preserve and who offer a matching contri-
mistic that there are a host of power generated from re- weather the storm and bution to employee retire- INDEXES, RATES AND COMMODITIES
matters that will fall under newable sources, called a weather the uncertainty and ment plans. That percentage
an extenders bill and PTC is renewable energy standard. come out the back end.” fell to 70 percent this year, INDEXES This week Last weekMonth ago Year ago
one of them.” compared with 80 percent in Dow Jones 12,588.31 12,815.39 13,343.51 11,796.16
On Wednesday Boyce ded- Alternatives Reach Dan Voorhis at 2007. S&P 500 1,359.88 1,379.85 1,433.19 1,215.65
icated his company’s newest 316-268-6577 or The survey found that 82 NASDAQ 2,853.13 2,904.87 3.005.62 2,572.50
wind farm, Post Rock Wind If the production tax credit dvoorhis@wichitaeagle.com. percent of employers said
LOAN RATES (%)
Prime, Bridge Telerate 3.25 3.25 3.25 3.25
strict weather minimums, so I’ve been doing it for 34 no idea if I was going to be 30-yr. fixed mort. nat. 3.34 3.40 3.37 4.00
ly one of every four jobs. New a game called Poke the Pig,
APPS York ranks second, followed
by Washington state, Texas,
New Jersey, Illinois, Mas-
another that counted pitches
during baseball games and
one that aided in swimming
From Page 5B
sachusetts, Georgia, Virginia pool maintenance. He pre-
and Florida. dicted that Waycaster will
economy would become in- Some universities have become “a serial entrepre-
creasingly international and begun retooling their curric- neur, for sure.”
that the United States should ula. At Mississippi State, stu- Waycaster, who plans to
do more to improve education dents are enrolled in such graduate in May 2014, said
and retraining programs and popular courses as Field Stud- he’d enrolled in the iPhone
to make it easier for compa- ies in iPhone Entrepreneur- course after teaching himself
nies to bring and keep more ship. how to create an app just by
talent from foreign countries. Professor Rodney Pearson, Googling and reading about
“We’re in a human capital the head of the information them online.
crunch,” added Rey Ramsey, systems department at Mis- “It really did help me out,”
the president and chief execu- sissippi State, said most of the said Waycaster, who’s the
tive officer of TechNet, a net- graduates from the business technology chairman of his
work of technology executives program made starting sala- fraternity.
that promotes the industry. ries of $45,000 to $50,000. “When you teach yourself
According to a TechNet “But we have had six get something, you have other
study released earlier this jobs as app developers at ways of thinking, and so when
year, California is by far the $80,000,” he said. you actually go through a
most dominant player in the He said students had creat- class in a structured way,
industry, accounting for near- ed all kinds of apps, including things connected.”
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 7B
growth slows D
ETROIT — Two years
after a wounded Gener-
al Motors returned to
the stock market, the
symbol of American industrial
BY DIANE STAFFORD said. might is thriving again.
Kansas City Star Nearly half all employers, Sunday marks the anniver-
45 percent, said they now sary of GM’s initial public
The cost of employee have or are considering stock offering in November
health benefits in 2012 grew using a defined contribution 2010. The company has made
just 4.1 percent nationally, plan that would require money for 11 straight quar-
the smallest increase in 15 their employees to pay any- ters, piling up more than
years. thing above the employer’s $16 billion in profits. Its cars
The National Survey of set contribution. and trucks are selling for good
Employer-Sponsored Health Whiting said he was most prices. And sales are strong in
Plans, conducted annually struck by a counterintuitive China.
by Mercer, said last week finding by the survey: But there are signs of trou-
that cost growth slowed this Health care cost increases ble. GM’s U.S. sales, the prime
year from 6.1 percent in for employers with fewer driver of its profits, aren’t
2011. than 500 employees were rising as quickly as the overall
A subset survey of 50 lower this year than for market. There’s been turmoil
Kansas City area employers larger employers. in the executive ranks, and
found a 4.3 percent increase The survey found employ- the company is hemorrhaging
this year, but the average ers expecting an average cash in Europe.
per-employee cost of health cost increase of 5 percent in Since the IPO, here are GM’s File photo
benefits locally was 2013, largely because they achievements, struggles and The familiar Chevrolet logo on a 2012 Cruze sedan, foreground, is seen on a lot with a 2012
$10,180, or 3.6 percent are continuing to make plan question marks. Sonic sedan in the background at a dealership in the Denver suburb of Englewood.
below the national average changes.
cost of $10,558. Looking ahead to 2014 Achievements which helps it to offer low- U.S. government can’t sell its two years. He took the reins
Employers have “taken and beyond, relatively few interest loans and cheap leas- 500 million shares in the as the company’s recovery
bold steps to soften the employers who currently Big profits: GM is making es. company without losing bil- from bankruptcy was hitting
impact” of the Affordable offer employee health bene- money – nearly $4 billion so New lineup: As it headed lions. The government got its its stride. The board hoped his
Care Act in 2014, said Julio fits said they were likely to far this year. Most of that into bankruptcy, GM cut stake in exchange for a $49.5 background in private equity
Portalatin, Mercer CEO. terminate coverage. came from the U.S., where spending on research. So for billion bailout almost four would give him a fresh per-
“Employers are very aware “Just 7 percent of large GM cars and trucks are selling much of the past two years, years ago. But the taxpayers spective and allow him to
that in 2014, when the employers and 22 percent of for almost 6 percent more the company had few new are still $27 billion in the hole shake up the slow-moving
health reform law’s provi- small employers (those with than they did in January of models to offer. But now it’s on the investment, and GM company.
sions kick in, they will be 10-499 employees) believe 2011. flush with cash and spending shares would have to sell for Despite streamlining deci-
asked to cover more em- it is likely or very likely that The average selling price is millions to update or replace $53 each for the government sion-making, many in the
ployees and face added cost they will do so,” the report $32,662, says the TrueCar- 70 percent of its North Amer- to break even. company view him as un-
pressure,” Portalatin said. said. .com auto pricing site. GM ican lineup by the end of next U.S. market share: GM’s willing to listen.
The cost controls came by What’s also expected is a also is making good money in year. That includes much- share of the critical U.S. mar- He recently removed the
moving employees into continued move toward China and the rest of Asia, anticipated full-size pickup ket has dropped to 18 percent heads of sales, marketing and
consumer-directed health employee wellness plans – and it has turned around its trucks, which pull in big prof- from 22 percent since the end Europe, which some critics
plans or employee wellness even though proving a re- money-losing South American its. of 2008. That means rivals viewed as too much change
plans or by changing benefit turn on investment has been operations with a host of new like Toyota are taking away too fast.
plans. difficult to impossible. products. Struggles buyers who used to drive a Akerson has pushed to bring
Consumer-directed health “For the third year in a Better cars: Before its 2009 Chevy, Buick, Cadillac or products to market faster, but
plans — including Health row, there was a sharp in- bankruptcy, GM relied on Stock price: Shares of GM GMC. There are more trou- has hit resistance from engi-
Savings Accounts and crease in the use of incen- trucks and SUVs to make sold for $33 when the compa- bling signs ahead. GM’s U.S. neers who fear that quality
Health Reimbursement Ar- tives or penalties to encour- money. Cars were an after- ny re-entered the stock mar- sales are up only 3.6 percent could suffer.
rangements — are high-de- age higher participation” in thought, and GM got a rep- ket on Nov. 18, 2010. For a this year, far behind the 13.8 Finally, he has bred resent-
ductible benefit plans in wellness plans, the report utation for poor quality. The few months, everything percent growth of the overall ment among employees by
which employers contribute said. business model worked fine looked good. The stock market. GM blames the slow complaining that GM’s culture
a defined amount into em- The most common in- until gas prices spiked over $3 peaked in January of 2011 at growth on having the oldest is risk-averse and slow.
ployees’ individual spending centive for employees to per gallon around 2005 and almost $39. But then the model lineup in the market. “If I’m told the culture I’ve
accounts for the employees participate in health assess- buyers shifted toward cars. bottom dropped out and the That will soon change to the been brought up in is bad,
to purchase routine health ment, exercise and diet Since bankruptcy, the compa- shares tumbled. In July of newest lineup, the company then it’s almost like a personal
care services. programs was a reduction in ny has rolled out new com- 2012, they hit a low of says. insult,” said Michel Anteby, a
“If we’re not already at the the employee’s premium pact, subcompact and mini $18.72, weighed down by a Harvard Business School
tipping point for consumer- contribution. cars that are selling well. slowing U.S. economy and Questions ahead professor who studies organi-
directed health plans — and That median annual re- Car-based crossovers, which troubles in Europe. They’ve zational behavior. Anteby says
we may well be — at this rate duction for employee-only are more efficient than tradi- recovered some since, but are Leadership: Dan Akerson it takes longer than two years
of growth it’s coming soon,” coverage was $260. tional truck-based SUVs, also still almost 30 percent below became CEO in September of to change a company the size
said Mark Whiting, a princi- The survey also found that are selling. Trucks accounted the IPO price. That means the 2010, GM’s fourth leader in of GM.
pal in Mercer’s Kansas City more than half of employers for 32 percent of GM sales in
office. are looking for another 2008. Now, they’re down to
Twenty-two percent of all cost-management strategy 27 percent.
employers offer consumer-
directed plans, and the per-
– banding together in pri-
vate-sector health insurance
Cash pile: GM, which near-
ly ran out of cash at the end of
We invite our customers to The Eagle’s
centage leaps to 59 percent exchanges, an alternative to 2008, ended the third quarter
among the largest employ- federal or state exchanges with $31.6 billion in hand and
ers. mandated by the Affordable securities. Bankruptcy wiped
An employer’s cost of Care Act. out old GM’s debts and bur-
coverage in a typical con- These private exchanges densome contracts, and the
sumer-directed plan is about “give employers a way to new company’s cars and
20 percent lower than the offer employees a broader trucks have sold well around
cost of providing employee choice of benefits while the world. The cash allows
access to the more tradition- allowing carriers to compete GM to invest in products and
al Preferred Provider Orga- for their business and man- restructuring. It even bought
nization, the Mercer report age their risk,” Mercer said. a U.S. auto finance company,
Thursday, December 6
5:00 - 7:00 pm
The Eagle - 825 E. Douglas
For more information call 316-268-6406
-Meet Eagle staff - Enjoy free refreshments - Win prizes
- Have your family portrait taken by an Eagle photographer
-See an all-new photo show of Eagle photographers’ best
shots in The Wichita Eagle Photo Gallery on the first floor
- Listen to live Christmas music and caroling - Visit Santa
- Tour The Eagle and see the presses run - Kids activities
8B THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
YOUR WEATHER www.kansas.com/weather Sign up for free e-mail weather alerts and find current conditions,
extended forecasts, advisories and more at Kansas.com/weather.
5-DAY FORECAST TODAY TONIGHT MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY AROUND THE COUNTRY
Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow
Partly cloudy and breezy today with a CITY H L Sky H L Sky CITY H L Sky H L Sky CITY H L Sky H L Sky
slight chance of thunderstorms during
Abilene 66 52 t 71 50 pc El Paso 73 47 pc 72 41 pc Newark 52 38 s 50 42 pc
the afternoon hours. Highs will be in the 64° 64° 66° 65° Akron 54 32 s 54 37 s Eugene 54 48 sh 56 49 r Norfolk 57 50 sh 58 48 c
mid-60s, with winds from the south at Albany 46 25 s 48 29 s Fairbanks -12-26 s -10-25 pc Okla. City 63 49 sh 68 48 c
10 to 20 mph in the morning, increas- Iso. t-storms Iso. showers Albuquerque 62 36 pc 59 36 pc Fargo 48 35 pc 47 29 pc Omaha 60 43 pc 59 38 pc
Allentown 52 29 s 51 35 pc Flagstaff 50 25 pc 52 26 s Orlando 77 55 pc 76 59 pc
ing to 15 to 25 mph in the afternoon.
Gusts could reach 35 mph during the
63° 46° Amarillo 62 40 pc 70 35 s Fort Worth 64 52 pc 70 54 c Palm Springs 76 52 pc 78 52 s
Normal: 55° Normal: 33° 43° 42° 47° 48° Anchorage 21 10 pc 18 10 c Fresno 64 48 pc 65 47 pc Pensacola 68 52 s 70 54 pc
afternoon. Dry conditions will be the rule Chance of precip. Chance of precip. Chance of precip. Chance of precip. Chance of precip. Chance of precip. Atlanta 62 44 pc 62 47 pc Grand Rapids 53 35 s 53 40 pc Philadelphia 54 39 pc 54 41 s
for the early part of the upcoming week. 20% 20% Day: 0% Day: 0% Day: 0% Day: 10% Atlantic City 55 43 pc 54 47 s Green Bay 53 38 pc 52 40 sh Phoenix 76 54 pc 77 54 s
Night: 0% Night: 0% Night: 0% Night: 10% Austin 69 54 pc 72 56 pc Hartford 49 30 s 48 33 s Pittsburgh 53 34 s 55 37 s
Baltimore 51 37 pc 53 40 s Honolulu 83 69 sh 82 71 pc Portland 53 48 r 56 49 r
WEATHER IN THE REGION Baton Rouge
Billings
69
55
46 s
33 pc
72 50 pc
52 34 pc
Houston 73 53 pc 74 59 pc
Indianapolis 58 35 s 59 43 pc
Raleigh
Rapid City
56
61
43 sh
35 pc
54 42 c
56 34 pc
UV INDEX Biloxi 67 47 s 69 49 pc Jacksonville 65 51 c 68 53 pc Reno 52 32 sh 54 34 c
Birmingham 63 43 s 65 46 pc Juneau 24 19 sn 25 17 pc Rochester 50 31 s 52 37 s
Bismarck 44 27 pc 41 26 pc Kansas City 61 45 pc 61 42 pc Sacramento 61 49 sh 65 49 c
Colby
64/36
KANSAS 3
Boise 50 34 sh 55 41 c Key West 78 72 pc 77 71 s Saint Louis 61 45 s 59 46 pc
Boston 48 34 s 49 36 s Knoxville 60 38 s 63 42 pc Salt Lake City 54 36 c 53 37 pc
Topeka LOW EXTREME Branson 64 44 pc 61 46 c Lake Tahoe 40 27 rs 46 30 c San Antonio 68 58 pc 72 58 pc
Salina
Hays 64/45 62/44 Buffalo 52 33 s 53 38 s Las Cruces 71 42 pc 70 36 s San Diego 67 55 pc 67 54 pc
Kansas City
66/39 61/45 AIR QUALITY Casper 57 34 pc 51 35 pc Las Vegas 66 48 pc 65 48 s San Francisco 63 53 sh 65 52 pc
Great Bend Pollutant ozone Charlotte 57 43 c 57 43 c Lexington 58 36 s 61 43 pc San Jose 62 48 sh 64 47 pc
62/44 Chattanooga 64 39 s 65 44 pc Lincoln 61 41 pc 61 38 pc Santa Fe 55 33 pc 53 31 s
McPherson Emporia Cheyenne 57 31 pc 52 31 s Little Rock 64 44 s 62 48 pc Savannah 62 51 sh 64 49 c
63/45 35
Garden City 63/44 Chicago 59 43 s 61 46 pc Los Angeles 65 55 pc 65 55 pc Seattle 50 45 r 52 47 r
69/37 Hutchinson Cincinnati 57 35 s 58 40 pc Louisville 61 37 s 63 44 pc Shreveport 66 45 s 71 52 pc
64/45 GOOD UNHEALTHY Cleveland 53 36 s 53 42 pc Lubbock 63 43 t 72 37 pc Sioux City 58 42 pc 58 32 pc
El Dorado
65/46 Colo. Springs 60 34 pc 54 32 pc Madison 56 38 pc 54 40 pc Sioux Falls 57 40 pc 54 31 pc
Dodge City Medicine
67/40
Wichita ALMANAC Columbus 55 33 s 56 39 s Memphis 65 42 s 64 51 pc Spokane 45 38 sh 42 40 r
Liberal Lodge 63/46 Independence CONTINENTAL U.S. EXTREMES Concord 45 21 s 49 27 s Miami 82 67 pc 80 64 pc Tallahassee 72 48 pc 70 48 pc
62/47 64/47 Corpus Christi 71 63 pc 77 65 pc Milwaukee 53 41 s 53 43 pc Tampa 78 57 pc 77 59 pc
70/39 HIGH 83° Punta Gorda, Fla.
Dallas 64 51 pc 68 55 pc Minneapolis 55 40 pc 50 36 pc Toledo 53 33 s 54 38 pc
LOW 9° Alamosa, Colo.
OKLAHOMA Ponca City
63/48 TEMPS IN WICHITA
Dayton
Daytona
56
75
34 s
56 c
57 41 s
74 60 pc
Mobile 69 49 s 70 52 pc
Montgomery 66 43 s 67 49 pc
Tucson
Tulsa
75
65
45 pc
47 pc
73 45 s
67 48 pc
Enid At Mid-Continent Airport Denver 59 33 pc 56 32 pc Myrtle Beach 61 52 sh 59 50 sh Vail 37 19 pc 33 16 pc
64/48 HIGH 62° Des Moines 58 43 pc 56 39 pc Nashville 63 39 s 66 46 pc Washington 51 40 pc 54 43 pc
Tulsa
RECORD HIGH 78° in 1999 Detroit 52 37 s 53 41 pc New Orleans 66 53 s 70 56 pc Wilmington 54 37 pc 53 41 pc
Oklahoma City 65/47 LOW 35° Duluth 49 38 pc 48 35 sh New York City 52 41 s 50 43 s Yuma 76 53 pc 76 55 s
63/49 RECORD LOW 8° in 1959
PRECIPITATION IN WICHITA
Day: 0.00” Month: 0.55” Year: 24.67”
AROUND THE WORLD
(-0.35”) (-6.24”) Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow Today Tomorrow
NATIONAL WEATHER POLLEN & MOLD
CITY
Acapulco
H L Sky H L Sky
88 75 pc 88 74 pc
CITY
Geneva 46
H L Sky H L Sky
36 c 53 39 pc
CITY
New Delhi 82
H L Sky H L Sky
59 s 80 57 s
TODAY Low Amsterdam 51 32 c 47 43 pc Guadalajara 82 50 pc 81 52 s Oslo 40 30 pc 35 32 c
MONDAY Low Athens 68 60 pc 66 61 sh Halifax 42 29 s 45 33 pc Ottawa 38 21 pc 42 28 pc
TUESDAY Low Baghdad 77 65 c 69 56 sh Havana 81 63 t 79 63 sh Paris 51 39 sh 46 44 pc
Source: www.pollen.com Bangkok 91 77 t 92 78 t Helsinki 44 39 c 43 40 pc Port-au-Prince 83 70 t 82 70 t
Barbados 86 79 t 85 77 t Ho Chi Minh 90 75 t 88 75 pc Rio 76 65 pc 80 67 pc
Barcelona 65 55 sh 64 52 s Hong Kong 79 72 c 81 72 c Riyadh 81 59 s 83 64 c
FARM & GARDEN Beijing 50 34 pc 45 31 pc Istanbul 67 55 pc 66 57 c Rome 63 55 pc 66 50 sh
SOIL TEMPERATURES (2 inches) Belgrade 55 41 s 53 45 c Jerusalem 69 55 sh 70 56 pc San Juan 88 78 t 87 76 t
High: 53° Low: 51° Berlin 47 35 c 46 33 pc Johannesburg 77 62 t 82 62 s Santiago 84 60 s 85 58 s
HUMIDITY 41% (6 p.m.) Bermuda 75 72 pc 75 71 sh Kabul 56 28 s 56 27 s Seoul 50 34 sh 48 31 s
Bogota 63 52 sh 62 53 sh Kiev 36 29 s 38 33 pc Shanghai 65 48 s 61 55 pc
Brussels 48 38 sh 49 45 pc Kingston 88 78 t 87 77 t Singapore 88 78 t 86 78 t
SUN AND MOON TIMES Budapest 48 36 pc 50 40 c Lima 73 63 pc 73 63 pc Stockholm 41 37 c 42 40 c
SUNRISE 7:13 A.M. Buenos Aires 83 63 pc 83 63 t Lisbon 62 51 pc 60 56 c Sydney 75 55 sh 74 61 pc
SUNSET 5:16 P.M. Cairo 78 63 s 78 66 c London 46 36 s 50 47 sh Taipei 75 65 pc 73 70 pc
MOONRISE 11:42 A.M. Calgary 41 30 pc 36 34 c Madrid 63 41 pc 60 44 c Tehran 46 42 c 47 41 c
MOONSET 10:36 P.M. Cancun 81 71 sh 81 73 sh Manila 89 77 pc 90 78 t Tel Aviv 78 62 sh 76 63 pc
Cape Town 74 58 s 75 59 s Mazatlan 82 72 pc 87 73 pc Tokyo 58 41 pc 49 40 sh
MOON PHASES Caracas 87 76 t 87 76 t Mexico City 73 48 s 73 41 s Toronto 45 32 pc 48 41 c
Chihuahua 70 55 pc 75 52 pc Montreal 37 26 s 42 29 pc Vancouver 47 42 r 49 44 sh
First Full Last New Copenhagen 47 39 sh 45 44 pc Moscow 32 28 c 35 31 sh Vienna 47 43 pc 48 43 sh
Dublin 45 41 sh 54 47 sh Nairobi 74 59 t 79 60 s Warsaw 44 37 c 43 36 pc
Best
Frankfurt 46 41 sh 45 36 pc Nassau 80 71 t 79 71 pc Zurich 43 33 pc 49 37 pc
Nov. 20 Nov. 28 Dec. 6 Dec. 13 Key: c-cloudy, fg-fog, hz-haze, i-ice, pc-partly cloudy, r-rain, rs-rain/snow, sh-showers, sn-snow, s-sunny, t-thunderstorms, w-windy.
BAKE UP YOUR
THE WINNERS
ARE IN!
Presented
By
Go to
HilandDairy.
com
for Money
Saving Coup
ons
today!
On Thanksgiving November 22 nd
SUNDAY
1D
NOVEMBER 18, 2012
1
Kansas St....................24
2
Stanford................17
3
Wake Forest.................0
4
Western Carolina .......0
5
Georgia Southern....14
Baylor ...........................52 Oregon .................14, OT Notre Dame................38 Alabama......................49 Georgia........................45
W
game that derailed
Kansas State’s dream
season won’t be
remembered for a
signature play or a
memorable finish.
Baylor’s 52-24 victory over the
Wildcats was too thorough for that.
When college football fans think
back to this game they will recall a
Baylor offense that did whatever it
wanted against an injured Wildcats
defense, three interceptions from
Collin Klein and a throng of un-
characteris-
tic mistakes
“We just didn’t rarely seen
get it done … from Bill
Snyder-
There is loss. coached
There is pain.” teams.
K-State The Wild-
cats, who
quarterback came to
Collin Klein Baylor on
top of the
BCS stand-
ings and in control of their own
destiny in the national champi-
onship race, played their worst
game of the season at the worst
possible time.
Just like that, at least some of
their dreams were dashed.
“This one stings, and it should,”
said Klein, who threw for 286 yards
and two touchdowns. “We weren’t
able to do what we wanted to do.”
The Wildcats didn’t come close
on defense. K-State could do little
to stop the Bears’ high-powered
offense, allowing Baylor running
backs Lache Seastrunk and Glasco
Martin to run wild for a combined
total of nearly 300 yards and four
Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle touchdowns while quarterback
Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein (7) reacts in the final minutes against Baylor on Saturday night as the Wildcats were upset 52-24 in
Waco, Texas. Please see K-STATE, Page 7D
1
Kansas St....................24
2
Stanford................17
3
Wake Forest.................0
4
Western Carolina .......0
5
Georgia Southern....14
Baylor ...........................52 Oregon .................14, OT Notre Dame................38 Alabama......................49 Georgia........................45
BEAR TRAP
K-State watches BCS title dreams come to an end with blowout loss to Baylor
BY KELLIS ROBINETT lor on top of the BCS standings quarterback Nick Florence to take was in position to play for its first Stadium. Baylor gained more than
The Wichita Eagle and in control of their own destiny chances deep. That put consider- national championship and could 500 yards of offense against a
in the national championship race, able pressure on its own offense. have clinched a share of its first K-State defense that was without
ACO, Texas — The played their worst Behind senior quarterback Collin conference championship since injured starting safety Ty Zimmer-
W
game that derailed game of the sea- Klein, that normally isn’t a prob- 2003. It can still earn a league title man, who watched the game from
Kansas State’s Check out a son at the worst lem. But the Heisman Trophy by beating Texas in the season the sidelines on crutches. His re-
dream season won’t photo gallery at possible time and contender threw a season-high finale on Dec. 2 in Manhattan, but placement — freshman Dante Bar-
be remembered for Kansas.com lost 52-24 three interceptions and the Wild- K-State will need all kinds of help nett — struggled.
a signature play or a K-State could do cats suffered their first loss of the to reach the BCS championship The Bears went right at him
memorable finish, little to stop the Bears’ high-pow- year. game. early and Tevin Reese beat him for
but for a throng of injuries and ered offense, allowing Baylor run- It was a frustrating end to a Its ultimate dream is now likely a 38-yard touchdown pass to give
uncharacteristic mistakes. ning backs Lache Seastrunk and remarkable 10-game winning out of reach because of what hap-
The Wildcats, who came to Bay- Glasco Martin to run wild and streak. K-State (10-1, 7-1 Big 12) pened Saturday at Floyd Casey Please see K-STATE, Page 7D
Sampler
“I mean, did you do the math? I
didn't. I like to actually see the “The tone of your piece … skews
sun once in a while.” Detroit shrill with some frequency, which
columnist Mitch Albom, explain- hurts your credibility.” Carson Cis-
ing why advanced baseball tulli’s response to Mitch Albom,
statistics have no place in deter- posted at the baseball statistical
mining the value of players. web site fangraphs.com.
Sunday
Syracuse
3 p.m.
Friday
Baltimore
7:30 p.m.
Dec. 7
at Baltimore
6:30 p.m
Dec. 8
at Syracuse
6 p.m.
Dec. 15
at Rochester
noon
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Sunday Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 9 Dec. 16 15 in his first game as a reserve Poulter, the English player would play it safe. He did, but
Bengals Broncos Panthers at Browns at Raiders VOLLEYBALL this season, and the Utah Jazz who won the World Golf Cham- not without several close calls.
Noon Noon Noon Noon 3:25 p.m.
TV: KWCH TV: KWCH TV: FOX TV: KWCH TV: KWCH Kansas swept TCU 3-0 kept the Washington Wizards pionship’s HSBC Champions in His Roush Fenway Racing team
Sunday Wednesday Friday Nov. 24 Nov. 26 (25-18, 25-14, 25-17) on winless with an 83-76 victory.… China two weeks ago, had a even had to remind him several
Warriors Clippers at Celtics at 76ers Hornets Saturday in Lawrence to im- O.J. Mayo scored 19 points and 13-under 203 total at Kingston times in the final 10 laps to avoid
6 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. prove to 23-6 and 11-4 in Big the Dallas Mavericks used a pair Heath. Scott, from Australia, potential pitfalls.
TV: FSKC TV: ESPN TV: FSKC TV: FSN+ TV: FSKC 12 play. It’s the most wins in a of 9-0 runs in the fourth quarter shot a 67. Regan Smith won the
Gray indicates home game season for the No. 22-ranked to defeat the Cleveland Cavaliers ■ Sweden’s Henrik Stenson 400-mile race. Kyle Busch was
y-NIT Season Tip-Off at New York; k-at Sprint Center, Kansas City; v-at Springfield, Mo.
c-Women’s Cancun Challenge; b-CBE Classic, Kansas City; m-Men’s Cancun Challenge Jayhawks since joining the 103-95.…Mike Conley scored 20 closed in on his first European second, followed by Brandan
Big 12, and also the most points and the Memphis Griz- Tour victory in three years Satur- Gaughan, Sam Hornish Jr. and
since 1991, when Kansas won zlies beat the Charlotte Bobcats day, shooting a 3-under 69 to Austin Dillon.
ON THE AIR SUNDAY 25 games. Junior Caroline
Jarmoc led the Jayhawks with
94-87 for their eighth consec-
utive victory.
take a three-stroke lead into the
final round of the South African
Smith did some smoky burn-
outs, then headed to Victory
Sport Time Event TV Radio 11 kills and two blocks. Open. Lane. But Stenhouse had dibs on
Basketball 10 a.m. Puerto Rico Tip-Off seventh place ESPNU ■ Texas Tech upset No. 20 GOLF the bigger celebration.
1 p.m. North Florida at Kansas St. FSKC 1480-AM, 107.9-FM Kansas State 3-1 (25-20, TENNIS Stenhouse became the first
1 p.m. Women: UTSA at Wichita St. 1330-AM 15-25, 25-22, 25-23) at Lub- U.S. Women’s Open champion since Martin Truex Jr. in 2005 to
1:30 p.m. Women: UConn at Texas A&M ESPN2 bock, Texas. It was the first Na Yeon Choi was steady after a The Czech Republic won the win back-to-back titles in the
3 p.m. Puerto Rico Tip-Off third place ESPNU K-State loss against Texas careless three-putt bogey early in doubles Saturday to take a 2-1 second-tier series.
3 p.m. Women: WNIT championship CBSSN Tech since 2004 and the Wild- her third round at the Titlehold- lead over defending champion
3 p.m.
3 p.m.
Prairie View A&M at TCU
Florida vs. Middle Tennessee St.
FCSC
FCS
cats fell to 21-7 and 8-7 in Big
12 play.
ers in Naples, Fla., and finished
with a 3-under 69 to take a
Spain in the Davis Cup final,
moving one victory away from
COLLEGES
5 p.m. Charleston Classic third place ESPNU one-shot lead into the final its first title as an independent A person familiar with the
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
NBA: Cavaliers at 76ers
Paradise Jam semifinal
NBA
CBSSN
FOOTBALL round of the LPGA Tour season.
Choi limited her mistakes,
nation.
Tomas Berdych and Radek
situation tells The Associated
Press that Maryland and Rutgers
5:30 p.m. Puerto Rico Tip-Off championship ESPN2 KCAC champion Ottawa lost even as those around her were Stepanek rallied to beat Marcel are in discussions with the Big
7 p.m. Florida Gulf Coast at Duke ESPNU to No. 2 Missouri Valley 56-21 dropping shots in a tough wind Granollers and Marc Lopez 3-6, Ten to possibly join the confer-
7:30 p.m. Charleston Classic championship ESPN2 in the opening round of the at TwinEagles. 7-5, 7-5, 6-3 to take the edge ence in 2014.
8 p.m. NBA: Bulls at Trail Blazers WGN NAIA playoffs at Marshall, Ai Miyazato quickly gave up going into Sunday’s reverse The person spoke Saturday
8 p.m. Paradise Jam semifinal CBSSN Mo. The KCAC is 4-27 in the her one-shot lead at the start of singles. night on condition of anonymity
Football Noon NFL: Packers at Lions KSAS NAIA playoffs since 1990. the round when a chip rolled Berdych and Stepanek im- because neither the conference
Noon NFL: Bengals at Chiefs KWCH 107.9-FM back to her feet beyond the proved their Davis Cup doubles nor the schools want to publicly
Noon NFL: Browns at Cowboys 1240-AM, 98.7-FM BASKETBALL par-5 second hole and led to
double bogey.
record to 12-1 by converting
their third match point in front
discuss their plans.
ESPN.com first reported that
325 p.m. NFL: Chargers at Broncos KWCH
3:25 p.m. NFL: Patriots at Colts 1240-AM, 98.7-FM Alex Davis had 22 points, 16 ■ Spain’s Miguel Angel Jime- of more than 13,000 fans at the Big Ten was looking into
7:20 p.m. NFL: Ravens at Steelers KSNW 1240-AM, 98.7-FM rebounds and five steals to nez shot a 2-under 68 for a share Prague’s O2 Arena, who blew expanding to 14 teams by add-
Golf 8 a.m. South African Open GOLF lead No. 7 Hutchinson to a of the Hong Kong Open lead trumpets, beat drums and ing Maryland and Rutgers.
12:30 p.m. LPGA: CME Group Titleholders GOLF 84-67 win over Allen County. with New Zealand’s Michael cheered loudly between points. The person says Maryland
Motorsports 12:30 p.m. F1: U.S. Grand Prix SPEED The Blue Dragons improved Campbell. The sixth-ranked Berdych can would have to be “the first domi-
2 p.m. Sprint Cup: Ford Ecoboost 400 ESPN to 8-0 with the victory. Campbell had a 69 to match clinch the best-of-five series in no to fall,” but added that an
Soccer 3 p.m. MLS: D.C. vs. Houston NBCSN ■ Anthony White led the the 48-year-old Jimenez, the the first reverse singles Sunday agreement could be reached as
3 p.m. MISL: Syracuse at Wings 1410-AM Friends men with 23 points 2005 and 2008 winner, at 10 with a victory over David Ferrer. soon as this week for both
8 p.m. MLS: Seattle vs. Los Angeles ESPN and eight rebounds as the under. Italy’s Matteo Manassero, schools.
Tennis 6 a.m. Davis Cup Final: Czech Rep. vs. Spain TENNIS Falcons defeated Bacone coming off a playoff victory in
83-63 in Wichita. Zach Nelson the Singapore Open, was a
MOTORSPORTS The Big Ten has 12 members
after adding Nebraska last sea-
Volleyball 11 a.m. Atlantic 10 championship CBSSN
1 p.m. Big East championship ESPNU added 29 points and six as- stroke back along with China’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is the sixth son.
1 p.m. C-USA championship CBSSN sists for Friends, while Colton Zhang Lian-wei. Manassero had driver to win consecutive cham- Maryland is in the Atlantic
Rauch chipped in with 18 a 64, and Zhang shot 69 in the pionships in NASCAR’s Nation- Coast Conference, which recent-
points. event sanctioned by the Europe- wide Series. ly added Notre Dame as a mem-
■ Jason Terry scored 20 an and Asian tours. Stenhouse finished sixth Satur- ber in all sports except football
points and Rajon Rondo tied his ■ Defending champion Ian day in the season finale at and hockey. Rutgers is in the Big
season high with 20 as Boston Poulter shot an 8-under 64 to Homestead-Miami Speedway, East.
beat the Toronto Raptors take a one-stroke lead over edging Elliott Sadler for the title.
107-89.… Al Jefferson scored 21 Adam Scott after the third round About the only drama in the
points, Gordon Haywood added of the Australian Masters. race was whether Stenhouse
Bob Lutz talks Paul Suellentrop, Kellis Robinett, Rustin Dodd, Tony Adame, Joanna Jeffrey Lutz,
about sports Wichita State Kansas State KU small colleges Chadwick, Wichita Thun-
and life blogs.kansas. blogs.kansas. blogs.kansas. blogs.kansas. high school der
blogs.kansas. com/shock com/kstated com/ com/ sports blogs.kansas.
com/lutz waves jayhawks statecolleges blogs.varsity com/thunder
kansas.com
WWW.KANSAS.COM ★ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 3D
920 Meadowbrook Dr
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short source.
The deal will pay Cabrera
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using a banned substance on
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Toronto officials have not a .346 average. He also had
Cowley College fell in its commented. Cabrera presum- 11 homers and 60 RBIs in 113
bid for a second straight ably would need to pass a games while posting a career-
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In four years under coach January 27 - March 3 24TH AND 25TH ONLY
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have finished as national
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Sessions
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WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 3D
short source.
The deal will pay Cabrera
$16 million, according to
reports, the first of which
a banned substance on Aug.
15.
The suspension came while
Cabrera was leading the Na-
nity for a fresh start in Toron-
to. 316-284-6161 920 Meadowbrook Dr
Newton, KS
HOLIDAY SALE
Eagle Staff came from ESPN Deportes. tional League in batting with
Toronto officials have not a .346 average. He also had
Cowley College fell in its commented. Cabrera presum- 11 homers and 60 RBIs in 113
bid for a second straight ably would need to pass a games while posting a career-
NJCAA Division II volleyball physical before a contract high .906 on-base plus slug-
title, falling to Grand Rap- would be finalized. ging percentage (OPS). CAGE RENTAL CARDS 50% OFF REGULAR PRICE
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do, Ohio. It was the first
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38-1. The loss also snapped
a 60-match winning streak
for Cowley. NOVEMBER
In four years under coach
Jennifer Bahner, the Tigers January 27 - March 3 24TH AND 25TH ONLY
have finished as national
runner-up twice.
Sessions
Ses
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foor Gra
Gr
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4D THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
East
New England
Buffalo
Miami
N.Y. Jets
South
Houston
Indianapolis
Tennessee
Jacksonville
North
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Cleveland
West
Denver
San Diego
Oakland
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
W
6
4
4
3
W
8
6
4
1
W
7
6
4
2
W
6
4
3
L
3
6
6
6
L
1
3
6
8
L
2
3
5
7
L
3
5
6
T
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
Pct
.667
.400
.400
.333
Pct
.889
.667
.400
.111
Pct
.778
.667
.444
.222
Pct
.667
.444
.333
PF
299
230
187
175
PF
250
186
219
127
PF
254
207
220
169
PF
271
209
191
PA Home
201 3-1-0
299 2-2-0
205 2-2-0
228 2-3-0
PA Home
143 4-1-0
201 4-1-0
311 2-3-0
246 0-5-0
PA Home
196 5-0-0
177 4-0-0
231 2-3-0
211 2-3-0
PA Home
189
191
284
3-1-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
Away
3-2-0
2-4-0
2-4-0
1-3-0
Away
4-0-0
2-2-0
2-3-0
1-3-0
Away
2-2-0
2-3-0
2-2-0
0-4-0
Away
3-2-0
2-3-0
1-4-0
AFC
5-1-0
3-5-0
3-5-0
3-4-0
AFC
7-0-0
4-2-0
3-4-0
1-4-0
AFC
6-1-0
3-3-0
2-5-0
2-5-0
AFC
4-2-0
4-2-0
3-4-0
NFC
1-2-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
0-2-0
NFC
1-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
0-4-0
NFC
1-1-0
3-0-0
2-0-0
0-2-0
NFC
2-1-0
0-3-0
0-2-0
Div
3-0-0
1-3-0
1-2-0
2-2-0
Div
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-2-0
1-2-0
Div
3-0-0
1-0-0
1-3-0
1-3-0
Div
2-0-0
3-1-0
1-2-0
Week 11
NFL
Thursday’s results
Today’s TV games
Noon: Packers at Lions
Noon: Bengals at Bears
3:15 p.m.: Chargers at Broncos
7:20 p.m.: Ravens at Steelers
KSAS
KWCH
KWCH
KSNW
East
N.Y. Giants
Dallas
Philadelphia
Washington
South
Atlanta
Tampa Bay
New Orleans
Carolina
North
Chicago
Green Bay
Minnesota
Detroit
West
San Francisco
Seattle
Arizona
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
W
6
4
3
3
W
8
5
4
2
W
7
6
6
4
W
6
6
4
L
4
5
6
6
L
1
4
5
7
L
2
3
4
5
L
2
4
5
T
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
0
T
0
0
0
0
T
1
0
0
Pct
.600
.444
.333
.333
Pct
.889
.556
.444
.222
Pct
.778
.667
.600
.444
Pct
.722
.600
.444
PF
267
188
156
226
PF
247
260
249
163
PF
242
239
238
216
PF
213
198
144
PA Home
216 3-2-0
204 1-2-0
221 2-3-0
248 1-3-0
PA Home
174 4-0-0
209 3-2-0
256 3-2-0
216 1-4-0
PA Home
133 4-1-0
187 4-1-0
221 5-1-0
222 2-1-0
PA Home
127
161
173
3-1-1
5-0-0
3-2-0
Away
3-2-0
3-3-0
1-3-0
2-3-0
Away
4-1-0
2-2-0
1-3-0
1-3-0
Away
3-1-0
2-2-0
1-3-0
2-4-0
Away
3-1-0
1-4-0
1-3-0
NFC
5-2-0
4-4-0
1-5-0
3-4-0
NFC
4-1-0
2-4-0
3-3-0
2-6-0
NFC
4-1-0
4-2-0
4-3-0
3-4-0
NFC
4-2-1
4-4-0
2-4-0
AFC
1-2-0
0-1-0
2-1-0
0-2-0
AFC
4-0-0
3-0-0
1-2-0
0-1-0
AFC
3-1-0
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
AFC
2-0-0
2-0-0
2-1-0
Div
2-2-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
0-1-0
Div
1-1-0
1-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
Div
1-1-0
1-0-0
2-0-0
0-3-0
Div
2-0-1
0-3-0
1-2-0
Kansas City 1 8 0 .111 146 256 0-4-0 1-4-0 0-6-0 1-2-0 0-3-0 Buffalo 19, Miami 14 Off: Open: Minnesota, N.Y. Giants, St. Louis 3 5 1 .389 161 210 3-2-0 0-3-1 3-3-1 0-2-0 2-0-1
Seattle, Tennessee
BENGALS AT CHIEFS EAGLES AT REDSKINS JAGUARS AT TEXANS CARDINALS AT BROWNS AT PACKERS AT LIONS JETS AT RAMS BUCCANEERS AT
When: Noon, Ch. 12 When: Noon When: Noon FALCONS COWBOYS When: Noon, Ch. 4 When: Noon PANTHERS
Line: CIN by 3 1⁄2. Line: WAS by 3 1⁄2. Line: HOU 15 1⁄2. When: Noon When: Noon Line: GB by 3 1⁄2. Line: STL by 3 1⁄2. When: Noon
Pick: CIN 27-23. Pick: PHI 24-20. Pick: HOU 24-10. Line: ATL by 10. Line: DAL by 7 1⁄2. Pick: GB 34-28. Pick: NYJ 24-23. Line: TB by 1 1⁄2.
Despite playing Pitts- “AAAWWWK!” The very bad Jaguars — Pick: ATL 31-16. Pick: DAL 28-17. Home teams almost The Dog panel looked Pick: TB 23-20.
burgh tough on Monday screams the Upset Bird, Baguars to their sack- Atlanta lost its perfect- Clevers coming off bye always have a big shot at this game the way a Bucs barely got past
the Chiefs have reeked skittish as always as the over-head fans — and ness to Saints last week is offset by the fact in a division rivalry, and buzzard looks at a Cats in September
to six consecutive loss- calendar approaches the very good Texans (setting off a weeklong Earthtones have lost 11 Lions are no exception road-killed possum. The 16-10, but Carolina has
es by a combined score the holiday that cele- present an extreme celebration by Mercury games in a row on the here, but all indicators tumultuous, bickering, sort of gone stagnant
of 157-78 and are 0-4 at brates decapitating talent contrast seldom Morris), and now the road, and the offense are aimed squarely at reeling Jets are facing a since then while Tampa
Arrowhead, which birds. I know, I know. witnessed. Houston Falcs will be after The has produced only one the Gee Bees. Green fourth loss in a row here has been en fuego, with
officially is denuded as a Philly has lost five in a beat Jax 27-7 in Sep- Big Rebound. ATL last lonely TD during the Bay is 11-1 in this series — especially if that five consecutive games
scary place to play. KC row, Andy Reid’s seat is tember and will dom- lost consecutive regular- past two games. ’Boys under Mike McCarthy 30th-ranked run D can’t of 28-plus points. Josh
is way due, though, and hot, and now rookie QB inate again, although I season games in De- need to get on a roll and and is coming off a bye. manage a way to keep Freeman has had a
inconsistent Cincy Nick Foles is all but think I’ll accept the offer cember 2009, and Matt climb into playoff hunt to Pack has some key Steven Jackson. Hey, 115.9 passer rating in
figures to be overconfi- certain to make his of those two-TD-plus Ryan’s 30-4 is the best save Jason Garrett’s job injuries (Greg Jennings, sometimes you make a those games, with zero
dent and thinking it is maiden start because of ’dog points, thanks. home record by a QB in and cannot afford to let Clay Matthews, Charles pick just because, you picks in 151 attempts.
better than it is after Mike Vick’s concussion. Texans are coming off the Super Bowl era. this one slip. Garret Woodson), but in what know? Sometimes Tardily, I think I’m finally
whippin’ the Giants last The thing is, Washing- that big, emotional (And that includes an could only be more should be a shootout at nothing is telling you it’s on board that Bucs
week. ton isn’t in much better showdown win at Chi- 8-0 run.) Reeling Card- under the gun if Mike the O Corral, I’ll take right except that strong bandwagon. (Which
shape, with three con- cago, face a natural birds are OK on de- Holmgren and Jon Aaron Rodgers just gut feeling that just might be what makes
secutive L’s, a 1-3 home letdown and will be on fense but just don’t have Gruden were lurking about every time. won’t go away. Upset! me so nervous about
record and a near-putrid autopilot in this one. the offensive pop to over his shoulder on the this pick.)
pass defense. hang in this game. sideline like vultures.
WEEK 14
Thursday, Nov. 22
Houston at Detroit,
11:30 p.m.
Washington at Dallas,
SAINTS AT RAIDERS CHARGERS AT COLTS AT PATRIOTS RAVENS AT STEELERS BEARS AT 49ERS 3:15 p.m.
New England at N.Y.
When: 3:05 p.m. BRONCOS When: 3:25 p.m. When: 7:20 p.m., Ch.3 When: 7:30 p.m. Mon- Jets, 7:20 p.m.
Line: NO by 5. When: 3:25 p.m., Ch. Line: NE by 9 1⁄2. Line: BAL by 3 1⁄2. day, Ch. 32 Sunday, Nov. 25
Pick: NO 37-24. 12 Pick: NE 34-27. Pick: PIT 20-17. Line: SF by 6 Denver at Kansas City,
noon
Two weeks ago, the Line: DEN by 7 1⁄2. This one got a Game of Game of the Week Pick: SF 19-17. Minnesota at Chicago,
Oakland defense was Pick: DEN 30-26. the Week sniff. Teams committee grappled Meet our Game of the noon
trampled for 278 rush- San Diego has won have won seven in a mostly with this one and Week first runner-up. Oakland at Cincinnati,
ing yards by Tampa. three in a row at Mile row between them and Bears-Niners, but since (Bears-49ers would noon
Last week, Oakland was High in this division Tom Brady vs. Andrew both games are affected wear the crown only if Pittsburgh at Cleveland,
bludgeoned for 51 rivalry, but things have Luck feels special, by quarterback issues, Ravens-Steelers were noon
Buffalo at Indianapolis,
points by Baltimore. changed. The change is somehow. Very much we went with the divi- caught in a scandal that noon
And now here comes named Peyton Manning. like Pats to win at home sion grudge match — forced expulsion from Tennessee at Jackson-
Drew Brees, who tends Chargers will have but also like rejuvenated and one of the best the pageant.) Monday ville, noon
to make even GOOD much incentive after Indy to keep it close. rivalries in the NFL. nighter stayed off bet Atlanta at Tampa Bay,
defenses look bad. I embarrassingly blowing Although trading for CB Shoulder and rib issues boards because both noon
mean, I know anything a 24-0 lead and losing Aqib Talib will help, will shelve Ben Roethlis- QBs, Bears’ Jay Cutler Seattle at Miami, noon
Baltimore at San Diego,
can happen in this weird to Denver 35-24 in England’s pass defense berger and foist veteran and Niners’ Alex Smith 3:05 p.m.
NFL. But, beyond a October, but Broncos has allowed 19 scoring Byron Leftwich into his were battling concus- St. Louis at Arizona,
Saints letdown after will have Manning, who throws and — you may first start since 2009. sions and iffy. As the 3:25 p.m.
beating Atlanta, there is in four home games has have heard — Luck-to- Crows have won past week wore on it San Francisco at New
little here testifying on 10 TDs, zero picks and Reggie Wayne can do a two at the Ketchup seemed likely that Smith Orleans, 3:25 p.m.
Green Bay at N.Y.
behalf of a Raiders a 115.3 rating. Bolts little damage. Bottle. would start but Cutler Giants, 7:20 p.m.
upset. have yet to beat a team will sit in favor of experi- Monday, Nov. 26 Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Pres
with a winning record, enced backup Jason Carolina at Philadel- Chicago Bears cornerback Tim Jennings
but keep this one close. Campbell. phia, 7:30 p.m. leads the league with eight interceptions.
INJURY REPORT
NEW YORK (AP) — The updated National Football League injury Toler (hamstring). PROBABLE: TE Jeff King (knee), TE Mike Leach John Phillips (ankle), NT Jay Ratliff (ankle), RB Lawrence Vickers S Dwight Lowery (ankle), CB Rashean Mathis (groin). PROBABLE: GERS: OUT: DT Aubrayo Franklin (knee). DOUBTFUL: T Jared Gaith-
report, as provided by the league: (back), S Kerry Rhodes (back), G Adam Snyder (quadriceps). FAL- (knee). QB Blaine Gabbert (left shoulder), C Brad Meester (foot). TEXANS: er (groin). QUESTIONABLE: RB Ryan Mathews (neck), TE Dante
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES at WASHINGTON REDSKINS — CONS: OUT: WR Kevin Cone (groin), S Charles Mitchell (calf). NEW YORK JETS at ST. LOUIS RAMS — JETS: QUESTION- OUT: RB Ben Tate (hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: TE Owen Daniels Rosario (hamstring). PROBABLE: LB Antwan Barnes (hamstring), S
EAGLES: OUT: WR Jason Avant (hamstring), WR Mardy Gilyard QUESTIONABLE: DE John Abraham (back), WR Julio Jones (ankle), ABLE: WR Jeremy Kerley (heel, hamstring), RB Joe McKnight (an- (back), LB Tim Dobbins (shoulder). PROBABLE: CB Alan Ball (ankle), Atari Bigby (quadriceps), CB Chris Carr (knee), G Tyronne Green
(hamstring), RB Chris Polk (toe), QB Michael Vick (concussion). RB Michael Turner (groin), DT Vance Walker (ribs), LB Sean Weath- kle), DT Sione Po’uha (back, ankle), RB Bilal Powell (concussion), LB NT Shaun Cody (ribs, back), S Quintin Demps (thumb, forearm, (ribs), LB Melvin Ingram (knee), P Mike Scifres (ankle), S Eric Wed-
QUESTIONABLE: G Danny Watkins (ankle). PROBABLE: WR Riley erspoon (ankle). PROBABLE: DT Jonathan Babineaux (thigh), WR Bart Scott (toe). PROBABLE: TE Jeff Cumberland (wrist), DE Mike toe), LB Bradie James (thumb), WR Lestar Jean (knee), CB Brice dle (knee, illness). BRONCOS: OUT: CB Tracy Porter (illness).
Cooper (knee), LB Akeem Jordan (thumb), LB Mychal Kendricks Harry Douglas (ankle), TE Tony Gonzalez (shoulder), LB Stephen DeVito (finger), DT Kenrick Ellis (knee), WR Clyde Gates (shoulder), McCain (knee), LB Jesse Nading (foot), DE Antonio Smith (ankle), G DOUBTFUL: G Chris Kuper (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: DE Elvis Du-
(foot), WR Jeremy Maclin (back). REDSKINS: QUESTIONABLE: WR Nicholas (groin), LB Mike Peterson (foot). DT Damon Harrison (thumb), WR Stephen Hill (illness), S LaRon Wade Smith (knee), WR Kevin Walter (groin), QB T.J. Yates (right mervil (shoulder). PROBABLE: DE Robert Ayers (groin), S Jim Leon-
Pierre Garcon (foot), S Brandon Meriweather (knee). PROBABLE: CB TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS at CAROLINA PANTHERS — Landry (heel), C Nick Mangold (ankle, thumb), G Brandon Moore elbow). hard (calf), DT Kevin Vickerson (thigh).
DeAngelo Hall (groin), WR Santana Moss (head), P Sav Rocca (right BUCCANEERS: QUESTIONABLE: T Jamon Meredith (ankle). PROB- (hip), LB Calvin Pace (shoulder), QB Mark Sanchez (back), G Matt CINCINNATI BENGALS at KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — BEN- BALTIMORE RAVENS at PITTSBURGH STEELERS — RA-
knee), C Nick Sundberg (forearm), T Trent Williams (ankle), CB ABLE: WR Arrelious Benn (shoulder), DE Michael Bennett (shoul- Slauson (knee), S Eric Smith (knee), QB Tim Tebow (ribs). RAMS: GALS: DOUBTFUL: WR Marvin Jones (knee), S Reggie Nelson (ham- VENS: OUT: CB Jimmy Smith (abdomen). DOUBTFUL: DE Pernell
Josh Wilson (shoulder). der), S Cody Grimm (hamstring), CB Eric Wright (Achilles), C Jere- QUESTIONABLE: LB Mario Haggan (thigh), WR Austin Pettis (toe), string). QUESTIONABLE: C Jeff Faine (hamstring), WR Andrew Haw- McPhee (thigh). QUESTIONABLE: NT Terrence Cody (arm), S Chris-
GREEN BAY PACKERS at DETROIT LIONS — PACKERS: my Zuttah (shoulder). PANTHERS: OUT: DE Antwan Applewhite DE Eugene Sims (knee), S Darian Stewart (knee). kins (knee). PROBABLE: LB Vontaze Burfict (elbow), S Nate Clements tian Thompson (thigh). PROBABLE: S Sean Considine (knee, chest),
OUT: WR Greg Jennings (groin, abdomen), LB Clay Matthews (hamstring). PROBABLE: LB Thomas Davis (not injury related), WR INDIANAPOLIS COLTS at NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — (knee), CB Adam Jones (calf), S Taylor Mays (knee), DT Devon Still LB Dannell Ellerbe (finger), WR Jacoby Jones (ankle), DT Haloti
(hamstring), TE Andrew Quarless (knee), S Charles Woodson (col- Armanti Edwards (groin), DT Ron Edwards (not injury related), T COLTS: OUT: CB Vontae Davis (knee), TE Coby Fleener (shoulder). (back). CHIEFS: OUT: G Jon Asamoah (thumb), WR Jon Baldwin Ngata (shoulder), S Bernard Pollard (chest), S Ed Reed (shoulder,
larbone). QUESTIONABLE: LB Terrell Manning (shoulder), CB Sam Jordan Gross (not injury related), C Geoff Hangartner (knee), G PROBABLE: RB Donald Brown (knee), NT Josh Chapman (knee), T (head, neck), TE Jake O’Connell (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: G Ryan leg, neck), RB Ray Rice (toe), WR Torrey Smith (chest), LB Terrell
Shields (ankle). PROBABLE: WR Donald Driver (thumb), RB Alex Amini Silatolu (shoulder), WR Steve Smith (not injury related). Winston Justice (knee), LB Robert Mathis (back), C Samson Satele Lilja (knee), QB Brady Quinn (head). PROBABLE: WR Dwayne Bowe Suggs (ankle), LB Courtney Upshaw (shoulder), G Bobbie Williams
Green (knee), RB John Kuhn (hamstring), G T.J. Lang (elbow, wrist), CLEVELAND BROWNS at DALLAS COWBOYS — BROWNS: (back). PATRIOTS: DOUBTFUL: G Logan Mankins (ankle, calf). (thigh), TE Steve Maneri (ankle), NT Dontari Poe (knee). (ankle), G Marshal Yanda (ankle). STEELERS: OUT: WR Antonio
DE Mike Neal (ankle), WR Jordy Nelson (hamstring, foot), TE Ryan OUT: CB Dimitri Patterson (ankle), S Ray Ventrone (hand, calf). QUESTIONABLE: DT Ron Brace (elbow), WR Deion Branch (ham- NEW ORLEANS SAINTS at OAKLAND RAIDERS — SAINTS: Brown (ankle), T Marcus Gilbert (ankle), S Troy Polamalu (calf), QB
Taylor (chest), RB Johnny White (illness), TE D.J. Williams (ham- QUESTIONABLE: CB Joe Haden (oblique), DT Ahtyba Rubin (calf). string), S Patrick Chung (shoulder, hamstring), G Dan Connolly OUT: DE Junior Galette (ankle), T Zach Strief (groin), CB Corey Ben Roethlisberger (right shoulder). QUESTIONABLE: LB Steven-
string), DE Jerel Worthy (concussion). LIONS: OUT: S Amari Spie- PROBABLE: TE Jordan Cameron (groin), WR Josh Cooper (illness), (back), S Steve Gregory (hip), TE Rob Gronkowski (hip), TE Aaron White (knee). QUESTIONABLE: RB Darren Sproles (hand). PROB- son Sylvester (hamstring). PROBABLE: CB Curtis Brown (quadri-
vey (concussion), DT Corey Williams (knee). DOUBTFUL: S Louis WR Joshua Cribbs (wrist), LB D’Qwell Jackson (calf), WR Mohamed Hernandez (ankle), LB Dont’a Hightower (hamstring), WR Brandon ABLE: WR Courtney Roby (shoulder). RAIDERS: OUT: RB Mike ceps), S Ryan Clark (concussion), DE Brett Keisel (shoulder), RB
Delmas (knee). QUESTIONABLE: CB Chris Houston (ankle), WR Massaquoi (hamstring), RB Trent Richardson (chest, rib, finger), DE Lloyd (knee), G Nick McDonald (shoulder), DE Trevor Scott (ham- Goodson (ankle), RB Darren McFadden (ankle), DT Richard Sey- Rashard Mendenhall (Achilles), T Max Starks (ankle), CB Ike Taylor
Calvin Johnson (knee). PROBABLE: DE Cliff Avril (back, concus- Frostee Rucker (shoulder, illness), CB Buster Skrine (ankle), DT Phil string), LB Brandon Spikes (knee), T Sebastian Vollmer (back, mour (knee, hamstring). QUESTIONABLE: S Tyvon Branch (neck), (illness).
sion), S Erik Coleman (toe), K Jason Hanson (left foot), LB Ashlee Taylor (chest, ankle, illness), S T.J. Ward (hand), QB Brandon Wee- knee), WR Wes Welker (ankle), LB Tracy White (foot), CB Malcolm WR Darrius Heyward-Bey (hamstring). PROBABLE: T Khalif Barnes CHICAGO BEARS at SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — BEARS:
Palmer (chest), WR Titus Young (knee). den (groin, thigh), S Usama Young (knee). COWBOYS: OUT: C Phil Williams (thigh). PROBABLE: WR Julian Edelman (hand), DT Kyle (groin), S Matt Giordano (concussion), TE Richard Gordon (ham- OUT: QB Jay Cutler (concussion), DE Shea McClellin (concussion).
ARIZONA CARDINALS at ATLANTA FALCONS — CARDI- Costa (ankle), S Matt Johnson (hamstring), DE Sean Lissemore Love (knee), LB Jerod Mayo (elbow). string), K Sebastian Janikowski (left groin), TE Brandon Myers DNP: DT Matt Toeaina (calf), LB Brian Urlacher (not injury related).
NALS: OUT: QB Kevin Kolb (ribs). QUESTIONABLE: DE Calais Camp- (ankle). DOUBTFUL: C Ryan Cook (knee), CB Mike Jenkins (back), JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS at HOUSTON TEXANS — JAG- (shoulder, concussion), RB Marcel Reece (hamstring). FULL: WR Alshon Jeffery (hand), DT Henry Melton (back). 49ERS:
bell (calf), CB Jamell Fleming (back), TE Todd Heap (knee), CB Greg RB DeMarco Murray (foot). PROBABLE: LB Dan Connor (neck), TE UARS: OUT: RB Maurice Jones-Drew (foot), RB Greg Jones (thigh), SAN DIEGO CHARGERS at DENVER BRONCOS — CHAR- No Data Reported
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 5D
KU BOX SCORE
Player
Van Der Kamp
Punting
No
3
Yds
118
Avg
39.3
Lg
41
Iowa State deflates Kansas
Punt returns ■Third-string was a pretty apt symbol for quarter.
Player No Yds Lg TB the night. Weis had spent the Pierson had taken the
Horne 1 -6 0 0 quarterback leads week campaigning for a handoff left before faking a
Kickoff returns Cyclones to win.
Player No Yds Lg TD grand sendoff for his senior reverse pitch to quarterback
Gary 4 86 31 0 class, a group that has been Dayne Crist, who had lined
Scoring
Iowa State 10 28 3 10 — 51
Tackles BY RUSTIN DODD through three coaches and up at receiver. Pierson then
Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total
Kansas 7 10 0 6 — 23 Scott 7-1-0-8, George 4-3-0-7, Shaeffer 6-0-0-6, The Wichita Eagle four years of nearly unprece- abruptly turned up field
Attendance — 41,608. Klein 4-2-0-6, Washington 4-0-0-4, Woods 3-1-0-4,
First quarter Reeves 3-0-0-3, Laing 2-1-0-3, Givens 1-2-0-3, Bun- dented losing. By Thursday, before running past the en-
ISU—Arceo 47 field goal, 10:18 drage 2-0-0-2, Jensen 2-0-0-2, Miller 1-1-0-2, Irving LAWRENCE — They he even offered to pay the tire Iowa State defense.
KU—Cox 2 run (Prolago kick), 4:22 1-1-0-2, Morgan 1-1-0-2, Stokes 1-1-0-2, McDonough
ISU—Woody 11 run (Arceo kick), :36 0-2-0-2, Morton 0-2-0-2, Kron 1-0-0-1, Maggitt dressed in black, ready to admission for students that But the rest of the half
Second quarter
KU—Pierson 55 run (Prolago kick), 14:50
1-0-0-1, Nelson 1-0-0-1, Durbin 0-1-0-1, Simon
0-1-0-1, Nealy 0-1-0-1, Woods 0-1-0-1
bury four years worth of didn’t have tickets. The mes- belonged to Richardson and
ISU—Gary 11 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), Interceptions — Scott 1-0. despair. All week long, Kan- sage was clear: Weis may not Iowa State, leaving Kansas
11:23 Missed field goals — none sas’ senior class had talked have recruited this senior dazed and abused. There
ISU—Horne 30 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick),
8:41
Kansas statistics about what a class. But these were now his were moments of sloppy
ISU—Richardson 1 run (Arceo kick), 3:33
ISU—Brun 20 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), IOWA STATE 51 victory guys. football. KU lost three fum-
1:01 Rushing KANSAS 23 would mean. “He just felt bad for the bles. More dropped passes.
KU—Prolago 21 field goal, 0:00 Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg
Third quarter Sims
Pierson
20 81
7 73
0
1
12 4.1
55 10.4
They’d been seniors,” senior center Trev- Cox mishandled a kickoff
ISU—Arceo 51 field goal, 1:35 close multiple times. They Orlin Wagner/Associated Press or Marrongelli said. “We’ve return, a season-long staple
Fourth quarter Beshears 3 40 0 23 13.3
Cummings 5 28 0 13 5.6
KU—Pierson 37 pass from Crist (Cummings pass
Cox 6 21 1 7 3.5 had one more home game. Kansas running back James worked so hard, and we’ve for Kansas.
intcpt), 14:19
ISU—Lenz 14 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), Bourbon 3 12 0 9 4.0 They needed this. Sims (29) steps out of just come up short.” Saturday was the fifth-year
Crist 1 2 0 2 2.0
12:12 If KU coach Charlie Weis bounds before landing in If Kansas (1-10, 0-8 Big anniversary of Kansas’ 45-7
ISU—Arceo 47 field goal, 8:19 Passing
Player Cmp Att Int Yds TD were directing this movie, the end zone while covered 12) needed any more mo- victory over Iowa State at
Team Statistics Crist
Cummings
9
2
20
5
1 156
0 33
1
0
maybe the Kansas Jayhawks, by Iowa State linebacker mentum or emotion, Weis Memorial Stadium in 2007.
IS KU decked out in all-black jer- Jeremiah George (52) during surprised his players with a That victory made KU a per-
First downs 27 23 Receiving
Rushing 12 12 Player No Yds TD Lg seys for senior night, would the first half of Saturday’s jersey change. The Jayhawks fect 11-0, paving the way for
Passing 15 9 Mundine 3 63 0 35 have marched onto the field game in Lawrence. had warmed up in their an appearance on the cover
Penalty 0 2 Pick 2 37 0 20
3rd-down efficiency 8-14 5-15 Patterson 2 9 0 7 and recorded a much-needed traditional blue home jerseys of Sports Illustrated and an
4th-down efficiency 0-0 2-4 Pierson 1 37 1 37
Rushes-yards 42-241 48-252 Cox 1 17 0 17 victory in front of an ener- threw for three touchdowns, before returning to the lock- Orange Bowl victory. Two
Comp-att-int 34-27-0 25-11-4 Sims 1 16 0 16 gized crowd inside Memorial ran for another and turned a er room and finding an all- years later, KU would defeat
Passing yards 307 189 Parmalee 1 10 0 10
Total net yards 548 441 Stadium. 14-10 deficit into a 38-17 black get-up, accompanied Iowa State at home again,
Punting
Fumbles-lost 2-1 5-3 Player No Yds Avg Lg But if Weis and Kansas lead. by white helmets. improving to 5-0 on Oct. 10,
Penalties-yards 5-50 1-10
Time of possession 29:56 30:04
Doherty 4 152 38.0 45 have learned one thing over “Just missed tackles,” se- If the jerseys had a psycho- 2009. Since that day, the KU
Punt returns the past 11 games, it’s that nior safety Bradley McDou- logical effect, it was nullified program is now 6-36 in its
Player No Yds Lg TB
Iowa State statistics Patterson 1 21 21 0 the Big 12 Conference can be gald said, “missed assign- when Richardson entered last 42 games. And the latest
Rushing Kickoff returns a crushing reality check. The ments.” the game for starter Steele loss extended KU’s Big 12
Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg Player No Yds Lg TD
Woody 9 89 1 43 9.9 Pierson 2 45 28 0 latest dose came in a 51-23 By halftime, some of KU’s Jantz in the first quarter. losing streak to 20 games.
White 6 57 0 44 9.5 Cox 1 3 3 0 loss to Iowa State on Satur- players were still trying to “It normally lasts about a Kansas’ senior class has
Johnson 9 51 0 15 5.7 Beshears 2 60 30 0
Richardson 11 43 0 9 3.9 day night, a systematic dis- learn Richardson’s name. half a quarter,” Weis said of been through it all. And
Jantz 1 4 0 4 4.0 Tackles mantling at the hands of a And Weis admitted that KU the energy boost. “And guess Saturday’s loss was another
Barnett 2 0 0 3 0.5 Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total
Nealy 3 -1 0 3 -0.3 Heeney 8-5-0-13, Brown 7-2-0-9, Smith 5-4-0-9, Mc- third-string quarterback. had no idea that Richardson what, it lasted for about a rough night — and another
Standard 1 -3 0 0 -3.0 Donald 2-4-0-6, Goodman 5-0-0-5, Opurum 2-3-0-5,
McDougald 4-0-0-4, Agostinho 4-0-0-4, Patmon Iowa State’s Sam Rich- would play on Saturday. half a quarter.” black mark — for the KU
Passing 3-1-0-4, Bakare 1-3-0-4, Willis 0-4-0-4, Shepherd ardson, a redshirt freshman “He wasn’t even listed in To that point, Kansas had football program.
Player Cmp Att Int Yds TD 2-1-0-3, Love 1-2-0-3, Prolago 1-0-0-1, Hunt 1-0-0-1,
Richardson 23 27 0 250 4 Stowers 1-0-0-1, Reynolds 1-0-0-1, Linton 0-1-0-1, Ta- who had not thrown a pass the two-deep (depth chart),” built a 7-3 lead on a 2-yard “That’s not the way we had
Jantz 3 5 0 19 0 vai 0-1-0-1, Williams 0-1-0-1.
Barnett 1 2 0 38 0 Interceptions — none in his college career, com- Weis said. “So, no, I didn’t touchdown run by junior this night planned,” senior
Receiving Missed field goals — none pleted 23 of 27 passes for give much thought to (him). Taylor Cox. Even after sur- defensive end Toben Opu-
Player No Yds TD Lg 250 yards and four touch- And maybe I should have.” rendering the lead late in the rum said. “We really feel like
Lenz
Young
6
4
78
31
1
0
30
11
KU schedule downs, and Iowa State By halftime, the KU stu- first quarter, sophomore we had a game plan that
Sept. 1 S. Dakota St. W,31-17
Brun
Bundrage
3
3
26
25
1
0
20
11
Sept. 8 Rice L,25-24 wrecked KU’s night in a dents — many of whom had running back Tony Pierson would shut down their at-
Sept. 15 TCU L,20-6
Horne 2 40 1 30 Sept. 22 at N. Illinois L,30-23 decisive second-quarter beat- been treated to free tickets gave KU a 14-10 lead on a tack. We did a poor job exe-
West 2 31 0 19
Gary 2 14 1 11
Oct. 6 at Kansas St. L,56-16 down. In a span of just more by Weis — had nearly desert- 55-yard touchdown run with cuting what was asked of
Oct. 13 Oklahoma St. L,20-14
Nealy 1 38 0 38 Oct. 20 at Oklahoma L,52-7 than 10 minutes, Richardson ed the grounds. And that 14:50 left in the second us.”
Tiller 1 10 0 10 Oct. 27 Texas L,21-17
Johnson 1 8 0 8
JAYHAWK REPORT
Nov. 3 at Baylor L,41-14
Hammerschmidt 1 5 0 5 Nov. 10 at Texas Tech L,41-34
White 1 1 0 1 Nov. 17 Iowa St. L,51-23
Dec. 1 at West Virginia TBA
First quarter Third quarter KU fell behind big, and the Player of the game
lack of a passing game was
Key play: Iowa State’s Jeff Key play: KU quarterback crippling. Iowa State appears to have
Woody rushed in from 11 Dayne Crist was picked off by Defense: D-. The Kansas found a quarterback. Sam
yards out, giving the Cyclones Iowa State’s Willie Scott late defense was torched by a Richardson finished 23 for 27
a 10-7 lead with 36 seconds in the quarter, setting up an third-string quarterback who for 250 yards and four touch-
left in the quarter. Iowa State field-goal drive. had never thrown a collegiate downs.
Key stat: The Cyclones Key stat: KU was outscored pass. Sam Richardson looked
gashed KU for 104 rushing 31-7 in the second and third like a blue-chip QB, and KU Reason to hope
yards in 12 carries. quarters. put up its worst defensive
performance at home. KU won’t lose another game
Second quarter Fourth quarter Special teams: C. There at home — or wear black jer-
was another bobbled kickoff — seys — for the rest of the year.
Key play: Iowa State’s Sam Key play: Iowa State’s Sam how many of those have there
Richardson, who entered in Richardson hit Josh Lenz on a been this year? But the spe- Reason to mope:
the first quarter, finished off a 14-yard touchdown pass, cial teams’ performance was
long drive with an 11-yard TD extending the Cyclones’ lead overshadowed by other parts KU is now one loss away
pass to Albert Gary with to 48-23. of the game. from a dreaded 1-11 finish.
11:23 left, giving Iowa State a Key stat: The KU defense Coaching: D-. Charlie Weis
17-14 lead. allowed 500 yards for the and his staff said all the right Looking ahead
Key stat: Richardson com- third straight game. things last week. But KU
pleted nine of 12 passes, wasn’t able to contain Iowa Kansas has a week off for
including three touchdowns, in Report Card State’s offense, and that left Thanksgiving before finishing
Orlin Wagner/Associated Press the quarter. KU with no hope. its season with a road game at
Kansas running back Taylor Cox (36) gets past Iowa State Offense: D+. Tony Pierson West Virginia on Dec. 1.
linebacker C.J. Morgan during the first half of Saturday's and James Sims can run the
game in Lawrence. ball. That’s been proved. But — Rustin Dodd
KU BOX SCORE
Player
Van Der Kamp
Punting
No
3
Yds
118
Avg
39.3
Lg
41
Iowa State deflates Kansas
Punt returns BY RUSTIN DODD Pierson had taken the
Player
Horne
No
1
Yds
-6
Lg
0
TB
0
The Wichita Eagle handoff left before faking a
reverse pitch to quarterback
Kickoff returns
Player No Yds Lg TD LAWRENCE — They dressed Dayne Crist, who had lined
Gary 4 86 31 0 in black, ready to bury four up at receiver. Pierson then
Scoring
Iowa State 10 28 3 10 — 51
Tackles years worth abruptly turned up field
Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total
Kansas 7 10 0 6 — 23 Scott 7-1-0-8, George 4-3-0-7, Shaeffer 6-0-0-6, IOWA STATE 51 of despair. before running past the en-
Attendance — 41,608. Klein 4-2-0-6, Washington 4-0-0-4, Woods 3-1-0-4,
First quarter Reeves 3-0-0-3, Laing 2-1-0-3, Givens 1-2-0-3, Bun- KANSAS 23 All week tire Iowa State defense.
ISU—Arceo 47 field goal, 10:18 drage 2-0-0-2, Jensen 2-0-0-2, Miller 1-1-0-2, Irving long, Kansas’ But the rest of the half
KU—Cox 2 run (Prolago kick), 4:22 1-1-0-2, Morgan 1-1-0-2, Stokes 1-1-0-2, McDonough
ISU—Woody 11 run (Arceo kick), :36 0-2-0-2, Morton 0-2-0-2, Kron 1-0-0-1, Maggitt senior class had talked about belonged to Richardson and
Second quarter
KU—Pierson 55 run (Prolago kick), 14:50
1-0-0-1, Nelson 1-0-0-1, Durbin 0-1-0-1, Simon
0-1-0-1, Nealy 0-1-0-1, Woods 0-1-0-1
what a victory would mean. Iowa State, leaving Kansas
ISU—Gary 11 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), Interceptions — Scott 1-0. They’d been close multiple dazed and abused. There
11:23 Missed field goals — none times. They had one more were moments of sloppy
ISU—Horne 30 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick),
8:41
Kansas statistics home game. They needed football. KU lost two fum-
ISU—Richardson 1 run (Arceo kick), 3:33
ISU—Brun 20 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), this. bles. More dropped passes.
1:01 Rushing If KU coach Charlie Weis Cox mishandled a kickoff
KU—Prolago 21 field goal, 0:00 Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg
Third quarter Sims
Pierson
20 81
7 73
0
1
12 4.1
55 10.4
were directing this movie, return, a season-long staple
ISU—Arceo 51 field goal, 1:35 maybe the Kansas Jayhawks, for Kansas.
Fourth quarter Beshears 3 40 0 23 13.3
Cummings 5 28 0 13 5.6
KU—Pierson 37 pass from Crist (Cummings pass
Cox 6 21 1 7 3.5 decked out in all-black jer- And then Weis, needing a
intcpt), 14:19
ISU—Lenz 14 pass from Richardson (Arceo kick), Bourbon 3 12 0 9 4.0 seys for senior night, would spark in the passing game,
Crist 1 2 0 2 2.0
12:12 have marched onto the field went back to Crist for an
ISU—Arceo 47 field goal, 8:19 Passing
Player Cmp Att Int Yds TD and recorded a much-needed extended period in the sec-
Team Statistics Crist
Cummings
9
2
20
5
1 156
0 33
1
0
victory in front of an ener- ond quarter. Crist, who
IS KU gized crowd inside Memorial Orlin Wagner/Associated Press would later hit Pierson on a
First downs 27 23 Receiving
Rushing 12 12 Player No Yds TD Lg Stadium. Kansas running back James Sims (29) steps out of bounds 37-yard touchdown pass
Passing 15 9 Mundine 3 63 0 35 But if Weis and Kansas before landing in the end zone while covered by Iowa State early in the fourth quarter,
Penalty 0 2 Pick 2 37 0 20
3rd-down efficiency 8-14 5-15 Patterson 2 9 0 7 have learned one thing over linebacker Jeremiah George (52) during the first half of completed just three of his
4th-down efficiency 0-0 2-4 Pierson 1 37 1 37
Rushes-yards 42-241 48-252 Cox 1 17 0 17 the past 11 games, it’s that Saturday's game in Lawrence. first 10 passing attempts.
Comp-att-int 34-27-0 25-11-4 Sims 1 16 0 16 the Big 12 Conference can be Saturday was the fifth-year
Passing yards 307 189 Parmalee 1 10 0 10
Total net yards 548 441 a crushing reality check. The dents — many of whom had jersey change. The Jayhawks anniversary of Kansas’ 45-7
Punting
Fumbles-lost 2-1 5-3 Player No Yds Avg Lg latest dose came in a 51-23 been treated to free tickets had warmed up in their tra- victory over Iowa State at
Penalties-yards 5-50 1-10
Time of possession 29:56 30:04
Doherty 4 152 38.0 45 loss to Iowa State on Satur- by Weis — had nearly desert- ditional blue home jerseys Memorial Stadium in 2007.
Punt returns day night, a systematic dis- ed the grounds. And that was before returning to the locker That victory made KU a per-
Player No Yds Lg TB
Iowa State statistics Patterson 1 21 21 0 mantling at the hands of a a pretty apt symbol for the room and finding an all- fect 11-0, paving the way for
Rushing Kickoff returns third-string quarterback. night. Weis had spent the black get-up, accompanied an appearance on the cover
Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg Player No Yds Lg TD
Woody 9 89 1 43 9.9 Pierson 2 45 28 0 Iowa State’s Sam Rich- week campaigning for a by white helmets. of Sports Illustrated and an
White 6 57 0 44 9.5 Cox 1 3 3 0 ardson, a redshirt freshman grand sendoff for his senior If the jerseys had a psycho- Orange Bowl victory. Two
Johnson 9 51 0 15 5.7 Beshears 2 60 30 0
Richardson 11 43 0 9 3.9 who had not thrown a pass class, a group that has been logical effect, it was nullified years later, KU would defeat
Jantz 1 4 0 4 4.0 Tackles in his college career, com- through three coaches and when Richardson entered the Iowa State at home again,
Barnett 2 0 0 3 0.5 Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total
Nealy 3 -1 0 3 -0.3 Heeney 8-5-0-13, Brown 7-2-0-9, Smith 5-4-0-9, Mc- pleted 23 of 27 passes for four years of nearly unprece- game for starter Steele Jantz improving to 5-0 on Oct. 10,
Standard 1 -3 0 0 -3.0 Donald 2-4-0-6, Goodman 5-0-0-5, Opurum 2-3-0-5,
McDougald 4-0-0-4, Agostinho 4-0-0-4, Patmon 250 yards and four touch- dented losing. By Thursday, in the first quarter. To that 2009. Since that day, the KU
Passing 3-1-0-4, Bakare 1-3-0-4, Willis 0-4-0-4, Shepherd downs, and Iowa State he even offered to pay the point, Kansas had built a 7-3 program is now 6-36 in its
Player Cmp Att Int Yds TD 2-1-0-3, Love 1-2-0-3, Prolago 1-0-0-1, Hunt 1-0-0-1,
Richardson 23 27 0 250 4 Stowers 1-0-0-1, Reynolds 1-0-0-1, Linton 0-1-0-1, Ta- wrecked KU’s night in a deci- admission for students that lead on a 2-yard touchdown last 42 games. And the latest
Jantz 3 5 0 19 0 vai 0-1-0-1, Williams 0-1-0-1.
Barnett 1 2 0 38 0 Interceptions — none sive second-quarter beat- didn’t have tickets. The mes- run by junior Taylor Cox. loss extended KU’s Big 12
Receiving Missed field goals — none down. In a span of just more sage was clear: Weis may not Even after surrendering the losing streak to 20 games.
Player No Yds TD Lg than 10 minutes, Richardson have recruited this senior lead late in the first quarter, Kansas’ senior class has
Lenz
Young
6
4
78
31
1
0
30
11
KU schedule threw for three touchdowns, class. But these were now his sophomore running back been through it all. And
Sept. 1 S. Dakota St. W,31-17
Brun
Bundrage
3
3
26
25
1
0
20
11
Sept. 8 Rice L,25-24 ran for another and turned a guys. Tony Pierson gave KU a Saturday’s loss was another
Sept. 15 TCU L,20-6
Horne 2 40 1 30 Sept. 22 at N. Illinois L,30-23 14-10 deficit into a 38-17 If Kansas needed any more 14-10 lead on a 55-yard rough night — and another
West 2 31 0 19
Gary 2 14 1 11
Oct. 6 at Kansas St. L,56-16 lead. momentum or emotion, Weis touchdown run with 14:50 black mark — for the KU foot-
Oct. 13 Oklahoma St. L,20-14
Nealy 1 38 0 38 Oct. 20 at Oklahoma L,52-7 By halftime, the KU stu- surprised his players with a left in the second quarter. ball program.
Tiller 1 10 0 10 Oct. 27 Texas L,21-17
Johnson 1 8 0 8
JAYHAWK REPORT
Nov. 3 at Baylor L,41-14
Hammerschmidt 1 5 0 5 Nov. 10 at Texas Tech L,41-34
White 1 1 0 1 Nov. 17 Iowa St. L,51-23
Dec. 1 at West Virginia TBA
First quarter Third quarter KU fell behind big, and the Player of the game
lack of a passing game was
Key play: Iowa State’s Jeff Key play: KU quarterback crippling. Iowa State appears to have
Woody rushed in from 11 Dayne Crist was picked off by Defense: D-. The Kansas found a quarterback. Sam
yards out, giving the Cyclones Iowa State’s Willie Scott late defense was torched by a Richardson finished 23 for 27
a 10-7 lead with 36 seconds in the quarter, setting up an third-string quarterback who for 250 yards and four touch-
left in the quarter. Iowa State field-goal drive. had never thrown a collegiate downs.
Key stat: The Cyclones Key stat: KU was outscored pass. Sam Richardson looked
gashed KU for 104 rushing 31-7 in the second and third like a blue-chip QB, and KU Reason to hope
yards in 12 carries. quarters. put up its worst defensive
performance at home. KU won’t lose another game
Second quarter Fourth quarter Special teams: C. There at home — or wear black jer-
was another bobbled kickoff — seys — for the rest of the year.
Key play: Iowa State’s Sam Key play: Iowa State’s Sam how many of those have there
Richardson, who entered in Richardson hit Josh Lenz on a been this year? But the spe- Reason to mope:
the first quarter, finished off a 14-yard touchdown pass, cial teams’ performance was
long drive with an 11-yard TD extending the Cyclones’ lead overshadowed by other parts KU is now one loss away
pass to Albert Gary with to 48-23. of the game. from a dreaded 1-11 finish.
11:23 left, giving Iowa State a Key stat: The KU defense Coaching: D-. Charlie Weis
17-14 lead. allowed 500 yards for the and his staff said all the right Looking ahead
Key stat: Richardson com- third straight game. things last week. But KU
pleted nine of 12 passes, wasn’t able to contain Iowa Kansas has a week off for
including three touchdowns, in Report Card State’s offense, and that left Thanksgiving before finishing
Orlin Wagner/Associated Press the quarter. KU with no hope. its season with a road game at
Kansas running back Taylor Cox (36) gets past Iowa State Offense: D+. Tony Pierson West Virginia on Dec. 1.
linebacker C.J. Morgan during the first half of Saturday's and James Sims can run the
game in Lawrence. ball. That’s been proved. But — Rustin Dodd
Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total
Tackles
No
4
Yds
130
Lg
50
TD
0
WILDCAT REPORT
Barnett 13-1-0-14, Brown 9-2-0-11, Childs 6-4-0-10,
Milo 5-1-0-6, Evans 4-1-0-5, Lutui 4-0-0-4, Boyd First quarter Fourth quarter Coaching: D. K-State play- in two weeks for an important
3-1-0-4, Sua 2-1-0-3, Williams 2-0-0-2, Chapman
2-0-0-2, Malone 2-0-0-2, Lucas 1-0-0-1, Mueller ers never gave up, but the game.
Scoring 1-0-0-1, Davis 1-0-0-1, Fields 1-0-0-1, Loomis 1-0-0-1,
Truman 1-0-0-1, Tannahill 1-0-0-1, Finau 0-1-0-1.
Key play: Nick Florence hit Key play: Collin Klein was Wildcats never made the sort
Kansas St.
Baylor
7
14
10
14
7
24
0 — 24
0 — 52
Interceptions — Evans 1-0, Malone 1-0. Tevin Reese for a 38-yard stuffed on fourth-and-one of second-half adjustments Zimmerman out
Missed field goals — none touchdown pass against trying to score a touchdown. that have helped them win so
Attendance — 38,029.
First quarter freshman defensive back Key stat: Baylor gained many games this season. Ty Zimmerman was healthy
B—Reese 38 pass from Florence (Jones kick) Baylor statistics Dante Barnett, who was play- more than 500 yards by the enough to make the trip to
KS—Miller 8 pass from Klein (Cantele kick) Rushing
B—Florence 12 run (Jones kick) Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg ing in place of injured starter end. Player of the game Baylor for the game Saturday,
Second quarter
B—Williams 22 pass from Florence (Jones kick)
Seastrunk 19 185 1 80 9.7 Ty Zimmerman. but was too injured to play.
Martin 19 113 3 15 5.9
B—Martin 2 run (Jones kick)
KS—Harper 7 pass from Klein (Cantele kick)
Florence 9 47 1 13 5.2 Key stat: Baylor gained 159 Report card Lache Seastrunk. He ran for The junior safety wore a boot
Salubi 2 -3 0 1 -1.5 yards. 185 yards and scored a long on his left foot and used
KS—Cantele 23 FG
Third quarter Passing Offense: D. K-State aban- touchdown to clinch the crutches as he watched from
B—Martin 4 run (Jones kick) Player Cmp Att Int Yds TD
KS—Klein 1 run (Cantele kick) Florence 20 32 2 238 2 Second quarter doned the run too quickly, and game. the sidelines. Zimmerman,
B—Jones 50 FG
B—Martin 15 run (Jones kick) Receiving Collin Klein threw three in- who led K-State’s secondary
Player No Yds TD Lg
B—Seastrunk 80 run (Jones kick)
Williams 5 87 1 43 Key play: Chris Harper terceptions. Other than a few Reason to hope with five interceptions in K-
Reese 5 61 1 38 caught a seven-yard touch- nice runs early, and some State’s first 10 games, was
Team Statistics Norwood
Goodley
4
2
43
26
0
0
19
14 down pass to pull K-State good throws to Chris Harper, K-State can still clinch a injured late against TCU. Re-
KS BU
First downs 21 29 Sampson
Seastrunk
2
2
20
1
0
0
13
1
within 28-14. the Wildcats were off their share of the Big 12 champi- ceiver Curry Sexton was also
Rushing 7 18
Passing 13 10 Key stat: Baylor led by 21 normal game. onship and advance to a BCS injured against the Horned
Punting
Penalty 1 1 Player No Yds Avg Lg points. Defense: F. Baylor ran the bowl with a win over Texas. Frogs and didn’t play on Sat-
3rd-down efficiency 8 of 19 10 of 15 Roth 3 144 48.0 51
4th-down efficiency 3 of 5 1 of 1 ball successfully and threw for urday. He was last seen with
Rushes-yards
Comp-att-int
31-76
27-51-3
49-342
20-32-2 Player
Punt returns
No Yds Lg TD Third quarter big yardage, too. K-State’s Reason to mope his arm in a sling and did not
Passing yards 286 238 Norwood 1 13 13 0 injured defense couldn’t stop make the trip.
Total net yards
Fumbles-lost
362
1-0
580
1-0 Kickoff returns Key play: Lache Seastrunk the Bears. The Wildcats’ dreams of a ■ Special guests in atten-
Player No Yds Lg TD
Penalties-yards 7-60 5-65 Jones 2 24 18 0 scored on an 80-yard run that Special teams: B. Ryan national championship are dance included two Orange
Time of possession 30:18 29:42 Goodley
Butler
1
1
30
7
30
7
0
0
put Baylor ahead 52-24. Doerr had an excellent punt likely over. Bowl representatives and Big
K-State statistics Key stat: Baylor rushed for that pinned Baylor at its own 12 commissioner Bob Bowls-
Tackles
Rushing Solo-Ast-Sacks-Total 121 yards. one and Anthony Cantele Looking ahead by.
Player Att Yds TD Lg Avg J.Williams 9-2-0-11, Dixon 9-1-0-10, Hager 8-2-1-10,
Lackey 7-1-0-8, Casey 4-0-0-4, Lloyd 4-0-0-4, Mason
made a field goal, but Baylor
Hubert 10 43 0 12 4.3 was better in this area. Texas comes to Manhattan
Klein 17 39 1 13 2.3 3-0-0-3, Hol 2-0-0-2, Blackshear 2-0-0-2, Hick 1-1-0-2,
Pease 2 3 0 3 1.5 McAllister 1-1-1-2, Fuller 1-0-0-1, Wilson 1-0-0-1,
Lockett 1 2 0 2 2.0 T.Williams 1-0-0-1, Burt 1-0-0-1, Johnson 1-0-0-1,
Thompson 1 -11 0 0 -11.0 Jones 1-0-0-1.
Interceptions — Holl 1-18, Williams 2-0.
Player
Klein
Passing
Cmp
27
Receiving
Att
50
Int Yds
3 286
TD
2
Missed field goals — none
Sept. 1
K-State schedule
Missouri St. W,51-0
K-STATE
Player
Harper
No
11
Yds
123
TD
1
Lg
36
Sept. 8 Miami W,52-13 From Page 1D
Sept. 15 North Texas W,35-21
Tannahill 6 55 0 17 Sept. 22 at Oklahoma W,24-19
Thompson 4 55 0 22 Oct. 6 Kansas W,56-16
Lockett
Miller
2
2
23
19
0
1
18
11
Oct. 13 at Iowa St. W,27-21 Nick Florence took chances
Oct. 20 at West Virginia W,55-14
Hubert 2 11 0 10 Oct. 27 Texas Tech W,55-24 deep and threw for 238 yards
Punting Nov. 3
Nov. 10
Oklahoma St.
at TCU
W,44--30
W,23-10
and two touchdowns.
Player No Yds Avg Lg
Doerr 5 236 47.2 53 Nov. 17 at Baylor L,52-24 That put considerable pres-
Dec. 1 Texas TBA
Punt returns sure on the Wildcats’ offense.
Player No Yds Lg TD Behind their senior quarter-
Thompson 2 34 18 0
back and Heisman Trophy
contender, that normally isn’t
a problem. But Klein couldn’t
lead his team back from a
multi-score deficit and the
Wildcats suffered their first
loss of the year.
“They got out pretty quick
and we were playing from
behind for most of the game,”
tight end Travis Tannahill
said. “That’s really not our
thing.… We are a team that
likes to run the ball. Obvi-
ously, we weren’t able to do
that.”
K-State rushed for 106
yards, but Klein spent most of
his time throwing out of the
pocket in the second half.
Baylor’s defense was pre-
pared for it, and took ad-
vantage. He was considered
the Heisman favorite coming
into the game, but has con-
siderable ground to make up
now that K-State isn’t un-
defeated. Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle
“Down the stretch we had Baylor wide receiver Tevin Reese (16) catches a touchdown pass from Nick Florence in
to force some things,” Klein front of K-State safety Dante Barnett on Saturday in Waco, Texas.
said. “Still, it was unaccept-
able. We just didn’t get it early and Tevin Reese beat back. a short run from Martin.
done.” him for a 38-yard touchdown “They took the fight to us,” The Wildcats answered
It was a frustrating end to a pass to give Baylor a 7-0 lead. Snyder said. “I thought we back with a touchdown when
remarkable 10-game winning Then Baylor’s running backs weren’t well enough pre- Randall Evans intercepted a
streak. K-State (10-1, 7-1 Big got going and the Bears took pared for it. We struggled on pass a yard shy of the end
12) was in position to play a 28-7 lead with 2:54 remain- both sides of the ball and I zone and Klein scored on a
for its first national champi- ing in the second quarter. think we were just not pre- quarterback sneak with 12:25
onship and could have As the game went on, the pared. I take full control on to go in the third quarter. But
clinched a share of its first injuries mounted. Tre Walker that.” K-State couldn’t get any clos-
conference championship was already out with an in- K-State managed to close er than 35-24.
since 2003. It can still earn a jury, but linebacker Jarell within 28-17 when Klein Baylor took control from
league title by beating Texas Childs and defensive ends engineered back-to-back there, and clinched the game
in the season-finale, but K- Meshak Williams and Adam scoring drives at the end of on an 80-yard touchdown
State will need all kinds of Davis both missed portions of the second quarter, and run from Seastrunk.
help to reach the BCS cham- the game with small injuries. things looked good for the “We just didn’t make the
pionship game. Combined with several Wildcats. Chris Harper, who plays we needed to at the
Baylor gained 580 yards of penalties that gave Baylor had 123 receiving yards, times we needed to and it
offense against a K-State (5-5, 2-5) second chances, caught a seven-yard touch- caught us,” Klein said. “We
defense that was without the Wildcats were fighting an down pass and Anthony Can- just didn’t get it done …
injured starting safety Ty uphill battle all night. Baylor tele kicked a field goal to pull There is loss. There is pain …
Zimmerman, who watched ran the ball straight up the within 11, and they were It’s going to test our mettle
the game from the sidelines middle, and continually getting the opening kickoff of and see what kind of team we
Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle
on crutches while his replace- pushed K-State defenders off the second half. are and what kind of family
Kansas State defensive back Allen Chapman (3) intercepts a ment — freshman Dante Bar- the line of scrimmage. With a But Klein threw an inter- we are and how we come
pass intended for Baylor wide receiver Lanear Sampson (3). nett — struggled. big lead, that made it hard ception on the next drive and together moving forward.”
The interception was called back on a penalty. The Bears went right at him for the Wildcats to come Baylor went ahead 35-17 on
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 7D
WILDCAT REPORT
First quarter Fourth quarter Coaching: D. K-State play- Texas comes to Manhattan
ers never gave up, but the in two weeks for an important
Key play: Nick Florence hit Key play: Collin Klein was Wildcats never made the sort game.
Tevin Reese for a 38-yard stuffed on fourth-and-one of second-half adjustments
touchdown pass against trying to score a touchdown. that have helped them win so Zimmerman out
freshman defensive back Key stat: Baylor gained many games this season.
Dante Barnett, who was play- more than 500 yards by the Ty Zimmerman was healthy
ing in place of injured starter end. Player of the game enough to make the trip to
Ty Zimmerman. Baylor for the game Saturday,
Key stat: Baylor gained 159 Report card Lache Seastrunk. He ran for but was too injured to play.
yards. 185 yards and scored a long The junior safety wore a boot
Offense: D. K-State aban- touchdown to clinch the on his left foot and used
Second quarter doned the run too quickly, and game. crutches as he watched from
Collin Klein threw three in- the sidelines. Zimmerman,
Key play: Chris Harper terceptions. Other than a few Reason to hope who led K-State’s secondary
caught a seven-yard touch- nice runs early, and some with five interceptions in K-
down pass to pull K-State good throws to Chris Harper, K-State can still clinch a State’s first 10 games, was
within 28-14. the Wildcats were off their share of the Big 12 champi- injured late against TCU. Re-
Key stat: Baylor led by 21 normal game. onship and advance to a BCS ceiver Curry Sexton was also
points. Defense: F. Baylor ran the bowl with a win over Texas. injured against the Horned
ball successfully and threw for Frogs and didn’t play on Sat-
Third quarter big yardage, too. K-State’s Reason to mope urday. He was last seen with
injured defense couldn’t stop his arm in a sling and did not
Key play: Lache Seastrunk the Bears. The Wildcats’ dreams of a make the trip.
scored on an 80-yard run that Special teams: B. Ryan national championship are ■ Special guests in atten-
put Baylor ahead 52-24. Doerr had an excellent punt likely over. dance included two Orange
Key stat: Baylor rushed for that pinned Baylor at its own Bowl representatives and Big
121 yards. one and Anthony Cantele Looking ahead 12 commissioner Bob Bowls-
Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle made a field goal, but Baylor by.
Kansas State wide receiver Chris Harper (3) pulls in a long was better in this area.
pass from quarterback Collin Klein in the second quarter,
setting up a K-State touchdown a few plays later by Harper.
K-STATE
From Page 1D
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10D THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ★ WWW.KANSAS.COM
Pass: 286 yds, 2TD, 3 Int Pass: 267 yds, 3 TD, 1 Int Rush: 66 yds, 0 TD Tackles: 3 Pass: 97 yds, 0 TD, 0 Int Rec: 9 for 158, 1 TD
Rush: 39 yds, 1 TD Rush: 100 yds, 2 TD Rec: 13 yds, 0 TD No FF, FR, Int or sacks Rush: 48 yds, 0 TD vs. UCLA
vs. Baylor vs. Sam Houston State vs. Stanford vs. Wake Forest
SATURDAY’S
TOP 25 HIGHLIGHTS
Stanford upsets No. 1 Oregon SATURDAY’S
SCORES
BY ANNE M. PETERSON
Associated Press East
No. 17 UCLA 38, NO. 21 USC 28 —
Brett Hundley passed for 234 yards and a EUGENE, Ore. — Jordan Williamson hit a Albany (NY) 63, CCSU 34
touchdown and rushed for two more 37-yard field goal in overtime and No. 14 Brown 22, Columbia 6
scores as No. 17 UCLA beat No. 21 Bucknell 24, Bryant 21
Stanford upset No. 1 Oregon 17-14, deny- Buffalo 29, UMass 19
Southern California, clinching the Pac-12 ing the Ducks a chance to clinch the Pac-12 Colgate 41, Fordham 39
South title and emphatically snapping a North and derailing their straight shot at Cortland St. 20, Framingham St. 19
five-game losing streak in their crosstown the BCS title game. Dartmouth 35, Princeton 21
rivalry. Harvard 34, Yale 24
Eric Kendricks blocked a punt and made
If both Stanford and Oregon win in their Hobart 38, Washington & Lee 20
a fourth-quarter interception for the Bruins final games next weekend, both will finish Holy Cross 24, Georgetown 0
(9-2, 6-2 Pac-12), who overcame in- with one conference Indiana (Pa.) 27, Shepherd 17
termittent second-half rain and USC’s NO. 14 STANFORD 17 loss, which means Johns Hopkins 42, Washington & Jef-
ferson 10
star-studded lineup for a gutsy victory that NO. 1 OREGON 14 Stanford will win the
Lehigh 38, Lafayette 21
puts them atop Los Angeles football. head-to-head matchup Maine 55, Rhode Island 6
A year after USC obliterated the Bruins and go to the Pac-12 championship for a Monmouth (NJ) 26, Robert Morris 21
50-0 in a game that led to a coaching chance to play in the Rose Bowl. Navy 21, Texas St. 10
change in Westwood, UCLA punctuated Stanford (9-2, 7-1) will visit No. 17 Penn 35, Cornell 28
Penn St. 45, Indiana 22
its one-year revitalization under Jim Mora UCLA, which defeated No. 21 USC 38-28 Salisbury 17, Rowan 9
with its first win over the Trojans (7-4, 5-4) earlier in the day to claim the Pac-12 Shippensburg 58, Bloomsburg 20
since 2006 – just their second in 14 South. Oregon (10-1, 7-1) will play rival Don Ryan/Associated Press St. Francis (Pa.) 44, Sacred Heart 24
years. Oregon State in the annual Civil War ri- Stanford quarterback Kevin Hogan (8) is congratulated by teammates after the St. John Fisher 63, Castleton St. 7
valry game in Corvallis. Cardinal defeated Oregon 17-14 in overtime on Saturday in Eugene, Ore. Temple 63, Army 32
No. 6 Ohio State 21, Wisconsin 14 — Towson 64, New Hampshire 35
The loss snapped a 13-game winning Villanova 41, Delaware 10
Carlos Hyde scored on a 2-yard run in streak for the Ducks, which was the longest fourth-and-1 on the Oregon 12 with 2:17 ground. Virginia Tech 30, Boston College 23,
overtime and the Buckeyes stayed per- in the nation coming into Saturday. It was left in regulation and Ryan Hewitt ran for Oregon’s top rusher was quarterback OT
fect. Stanford’s fifth straight win. the first down. Hogan hit Zach Ertz with a Marcus Mariota, who ran for 89 yards. Wagner 23, Duquesne 17
Ohio State (11-0, 7-0) clinched the Oregon’s loss, coupled with No. 2 Kansas 10-yard scoring pass to tie it at 14 with Mariota, a redshirt freshman who had Wesley 73, Mount Ida 14
Leaders Division title outright with the win. Widener 44, Bridgewater (Mass.) 14
But they are ineligible for the postseason
State’s – they were also the top two teams 1:35 to go. Ertz fought to gain control of been getting Heisman buzz, threw for 207
in the BCS standings – means Notre the ball with a defender as he fell to the yards and a touchdown.
as part of their punishment for NCAA
Dame is now the lone unbeaten team in turf on top of a Ducks player. The play was Stanford stopped what appeared to be a
South
violations under former coach Jim Tressel,
and the best they can hope for is to end the race for the BCS title game. initially ruled incomplete, but a video sure first-quarter Oregon touchdown drive Alabama 49, W. Carolina 0
Arkansas St. 41, Troy 34
the year unbeaten and to maybe capture The Fighting Irish control their national review overturned it for the game-tying when Mariota took off on a 77-yard keeper
Auburn 51, Alabama A&M 7
the AP Top 25 title. championship run, with No. 4 Alabama touchdown. to the Stanford 15. But the Ducks couldn’t Austin Peay 38, Tennessee Tech 31
Montee Ball scored his 78th touch- and a couple of other Southeastern Confer- Despite a pass interference call gave get much closer, and Stanford got the stop Bethune-Cookman 21, Florida A&M
down, tying Travis Prentice’s major-col- ence teams also in the thick of it. them a crucial first down, the Ducks were when Oregon went for it on fourth-and-2 16
lege record for career scores. But he Oregon was the only Pac-12 team that forced to punt on the ensuing series and on the Cardinal 7. Chattanooga 24, Elon 17
Clemson 62, NC State 48
fumbled on what would have been the Stanford hadn’t defeated over the past two Stanford took over with 36 seconds to go Stanford scored first on Hogan’s 1-yard Coastal Carolina 41, Charleston
record-breaker with 2:46 left in regulation. seasons. But the Cardinal’s tough defense and the game went to overtime. plow into the end zone early in the second Southern 20
smothered the highest scoring team in the The Cardinal had the nation’s best run quarter. Cumberlands 42, Mid-Am Nazarene
No. 16 Nebraska 38, Minnesota 14 – nation. defense going into the game, allowing an Oregon tried again on fourth-and-4 24
Taylor Martinez threw for 308 yards and Alejandro Maldonado missed a 41-yard average of just 54.8 yards a game. Oregon midway through the quarter, but was Drake 32, Jacksonville 29
two touchdowns to Kenny Bell while East Carolina 28, Tulane 23
field goal for the Ducks to open overtime. meanwhile, had the country’s third-best unsuccessful, this time when Mariota’s pass Florida 23, Jacksonville St. 0
becoming Nebraska’s career passing Redshirt freshman Kevin Hogan threw rushing offense, averaging 325 yards a to tight end Colt Lyerla fell incomplete. Florida St. 41, Maryland 14
leader. The Cornhuskers (9-2, 6-1), who for 211 yards and a game-tying fourth- game. When Oregon took over on downs from Gardner-Webb 21, Presbyterian 15
had to come from behind in the second quarter touchdown for Stanford, while Stanford held Ducks running back Ken- Stanford on the next series, the Ducks Georgia 45, Georgia Southern 14
half in four of its first five Big Ten wins, Stepfan Taylor rushed for 161 yards on 33 jon Barner, who was averaging 136 yards marched 59 yards in three plays – capped Georgia Tech 42, Duke 24
scored on four of their first six posses- Hampton 27, Morgan St. 17
sions against the Gophers (6-5, 2-5).
carries. rushing a game, to just 66 yards. Overall, by Mariota’s 28-yard touchdown pass to Howard 41, Delaware St. 34
Down 14-7, Stanford went for it on the Ducks managed only 198 yards on the Keanon Lowe – to tie it at 7-all. Jackson St. 37, Alcorn St. 11
LSU 41, Mississippi 35
Lenoir-Rhyne 21, Fort Valley St. 6
Night game Pass: 267 yds, 3 TD, 1 Int Night game Tackles: 3 Pass: 97 yds, 0 TD, 0 Int Rec: 9 for 158, 1 TD
vs. Baylor Rush: 100 yds, 2 TD vs. Stanford No FF, FR, Int or sacks Rush: 48 yds, 0 TD vs. UCLA
vs. Sam Houston State vs. Wake Forest
SATURDAY’S
TOP 25 HIGHLIGHTS
UCLA dumps Southern Cal
BY GREG BEACHAM
SATURDAY’S
SCORES
Associated Press East
No. 4 Alabama 49, Western Carolina 0 Albany (NY) 63, CCSU 34
Brown 22, Columbia 6
– Eddie Lacy rushed for three first-half PASADENA, Calif. — When Anthony Bucknell 24, Bryant 21
touchdowns and AJ McCarron set Ala- Barr roared through the line and hit Buffalo 29, UMass 19
Colgate 41, Fordham 39
bama’s single-season record for passing Matt Barkley squarely in the No. 7 on Cortland St. 20, Framingham St. 19
TDs. The Crimson Tide (10-1) rebounded his back, the roar rising out of the Rose Dartmouth 35, Princeton 21
Harvard 34, Yale 24
from a loss to No. 9 Texas A&M by build- Bowl was loud enough for a whole city Hobart 38, Washington & Lee 20
ing a 42-0 halftime lead against the Cata- to hear. Holy Cross 24, Georgetown 0
Indiana (Pa.) 27, Shepherd 17
mounts (1-10), a Football Championship After so many years underneath Johns Hopkins 42, Washington & Jef-
Subdivision team with two wins in as Southern California, ferson 10
Lehigh 38, Lafayette 21
many seasons. It was Alabama’s third NO. 17 UCLA 38 UCLA is on top of Los Maine 55, Rhode Island 6
shutout of the season. Monmouth (NJ) 26, Robert Morris 21
NO. 21 USC 28 Angeles and the Pac-12 Navy 21, Texas St. 10
South, thanks to a Penn 35, Cornell 28
No. 6 Ohio State 21, Wisconsin 14 — Penn St. 45, Indiana 22
Carlos Hyde scored on a 2-yard run in first-year head coach and a freshman Salisbury 17, Rowan 9
Shippensburg 58, Bloomsburg 20
overtime and the Buckeyes stayed per- quarterback who don’t realize they’ve St. Francis (Pa.) 44, Sacred Heart 24
fect. done something that’s not usual. St. John Fisher 63, Castleton St. 7
Temple 63, Army 32
Ohio State (11-0, 7-0) clinched the “Well, it is for me,” Jim Mora said. Towson 64, New Hampshire 35
Leaders Division title outright with the win. Brett Hundley passed for 234 yards Villanova 41, Delaware 10
Virginia Tech 30, Boston College 23,
But they are ineligible for the postseason and a touchdown and rushed for two OT
Wagner 23, Duquesne 17
as part of their punishment for NCAA more scores as No. 17 UCLA beat No. Wesley 73, Mount Ida 14
violations under former coach Jim Tressel, 21 USC 38-28 Saturday, clinching the Widener 44, Bridgewater (Mass.) 14
and the best they can hope for is to end Pac-12 South title and emphatically Gina Ferazzi/McClatchy-Tribune
the year unbeaten and to maybe capture snapping a five-game losing streak in UCLA linebacker Anthony Barr (11) and defensive end Cassius Marsh (99) sack South
the AP Top 25 title. their crosstown showdown. USC quarterback Matt Barkley in the second half on Saturday in Pasadena, Alabama 49, W. Carolina 0
Montee Ball scored his 78th touch- Eric Kendricks blocked a punt and California. UCLA knocked off the Trojans 38-28. Arkansas St. 41, Troy 34
Auburn 51, Alabama A&M 7
down, tying Travis Prentice’s major-col- made a fourth-quarter interception for Austin Peay 38, Tennessee Tech 31
lege record for career scores. But he the Bruins (9-2, 6-2 Pac-12), who over- year coach in UCLA history. “I can’t but we were confident coming into this
Bethune-Cookman 21, Florida A&M
16
fumbled on what would have been the came intermittent second-half rain and wait to hug my mom, shake my dad’s game.” Chattanooga 24, Elon 17
record-breaker with 2:46 left in regulation. USC’s star-studded lineup with a steady hand and kiss my kids. I don’t want to Barkley passed for 301 yards and
Clemson 62, NC State 48
Coastal Carolina 41, Charleston
Southern 20
effort. minimize it at all.” three touchdowns, but threw two in-
No. 16 Nebraska 38, Minnesota 14 – Cumberlands 42, Mid-Am Nazarene
Taylor Martinez threw for 308 yards and “When the season started, obviously Johnathan Franklin rushed for 171 terceptions in the Trojans’ third loss in 24
Drake 32, Jacksonville 29
two touchdowns to Kenny Bell while nobody thought we were going to do what yards and two touchdowns for UCLA, four games. USC was the preseason’s East Carolina 28, Tulane 23
becoming Nebraska’s career passing we’re doing now,” said Hundley, who went including a clutch 29-yard scoring run No. 1 team, but will return to the post- Florida 23, Jacksonville St. 0
Florida St. 41, Maryland 14
leader. 22 for 30 and didn’t throw an interception. with 4:02 to play after USC trimmed its season in a lower-tier bowl after next Gardner-Webb 21, Presbyterian 15
“But we all knew deep down inside that deficit to three points. week’s regular-season finale against Georgia 45, Georgia Southern 14
The Cornhuskers (9-2, 6-1), who had to Georgia Tech 42, Duke 24
come from behind in the second half in we could do it, that we had the talent. We Shaquelle Evans had eight catches for Notre Dame. Hampton 27, Morgan St. 17
Howard 41, Delaware St. 34
four of its first five Big Ten wins, scored on can do everything we set our mind to, as 114 yards for UCLA, which clinched a “You wouldn’t think we would lose Jackson St. 37, Alcorn St. 11
four of their first six possessions against long as we work hard.” spot in the Pac-12 title game in two this game with a senior quarterback LSU 41, Mississippi 35
Lenoir-Rhyne 21, Fort Valley St. 6
the Gophers (6-5, 2-5). A year after USC obliterated the Bru- weeks with its fifth consecutive win. versus a freshman,” USC coach Lane Liberty 33, VMI 14
Nebraska can clinch the Legends Divi- ins 50-0 in a game that led to a coach- The Bruins also played in that game Kiffin said. “We’re extremely disap- Louisiana-Monroe 42, North Texas 16
Marist 28, Campbell 7
sion title – and a berth in the conference ing change in Westwood, UCLA punctu- last year, but only by default after fin- pointed with this season. We’re too Marshall 44, Houston 41
championship game against Wisconsin on Memphis 46, UAB 9
ated its one-year revitalization under ishing two games behind postseason- talented to have that many losses.” Miami 40, South Florida 9
Dec. 1 – with a win at Iowa on Friday or a Mora with its first win over the Trojans banned USC. While Hundley led UCLA with the Middle Tennessee 20, South Alabama
Michigan loss at Ohio State Saturday. 12
(7-4, 5-4) since 2006 – just their sec- Everything has changed in Los Ange- same preternatural calm he has shown Mississippi St. 45, Arkansas 14
Martinez passed 36 yards to a wide- ond in 14 years. The Bruins celebrated les this season: UCLA entered this all year, Barkley threw an interception Morehead St. 76, Valparaiso 24
open Bell for the Huskers’ first touch- Murray St. 42, SE Missouri 35
in the corner of the Rose Bowl and showdown with a higher ranking and on the game’s first play and rarely NC A&T 22, NC Central 16, OT
down, and they later connected for a again with an impromptu dance-off in more victories than USC for the first looked comfortable. Barkley was ham- Richmond 21, William & Mary 14
30-yarder along the sideline. SC State 27, Savannah St. 13
the locker room, even while Mora re- time in a decade, and the Bruins mered on a blind-side sack by Barr with San Diego 17, Davidson 10
Minnesota had 98 total yards entering South Carolina 24, Wofford 7
minded them they’ve still got three backed it up. 2:21 to play, spending a long moment The Citadel 42, Furman 20
the fourth quarter. Nebraska pulled its
starters, and the Gophers scored on games to play. “It’s a great night, but we’ve got so on the Rose Bowl turf before walking UT-Martin 35, Tennessee St. 26
Utah St. 48, Louisiana Tech 41, OT
MarQueis Gray’s 1- and 6-yard runs. “It’s a great moment, and I’m excit- many things we still want to do,” off gingerly and watching USC’s final West Alabama 41, Miles 7
ed,” said Mora, the winningest first- Franklin said. “We’re going to enjoy it, drive from the sideline.
Midwest
Cent. Michigan 30, Miami (Ohio) 16
SCOREBOARD
13. (14) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 200, 84.8,
BASKETBALL Small College Men
NW Oklahoma 70, Fort Hays
Cleveland
Detroit
Western Conference
2
1
7
9
.222 41⁄2
.100 6
Oklahoma
Texas
Oklahoma St.
Texas Tech
6-1
5-2
5-2
4-4
8-2
8-2
7-3
7-4
Michael Campbell, NZ
M.A. Jimenez, Spa.
Matteo Manassero, Ita.
Lian-wei Zhang, China
67-64-69—200
65-67-68—200
67-70-64—201
66-66-69—201
-10
-10
-9
-9
New Mexico St.
at Gonzaga
at UC Davis
at Ohio
3
30
7
161⁄2
at Niagara
South Dakota
N. Arizona
Wofford
32.
0.
14. (15) Joey Coulter, Chevrolet, 200, 86.4,
68 Southwest W L Pct GB TCU 3-4 6-4 Fredrik A. Hed, Swe. 66-66-70—202 -8 at Saint Mary’s 211⁄2 E. Washington 15. (17) Kenny Wallace, Toyota, 200, 78.8,
College Men NW Oklahoma State — Freemyer 20,
Wright 2, Glover 15, Wooley 6, Akwari 1, Hen-
Memphis 8 1 .889 — West Virginia 2-5 5-5 Anders Hansen, Den. 69-64-70—203 -7 at Stanford 5 Belmont 30.
16. (5) Joey Logano, Toyota, 200, 82.3, 0.
San Antonio 8 2 .800 1
⁄2 Iowa St. 3-5 6-5 Peter Lawrie, Ire. 68-68-67—203 -7 at Duke 20 Fla. Gulf Coast
MVC derson 2, Taylor 2, Bell 13, Smith 9. Totals Dallas 6 5 .545 3 Baylor 2-5 5-5 Raphael Jacquelin, Fra. 72-68-64—204 -6 Providence-h 6 UNC Asheville 17. (18) Brad Sweet, Chevrolet, 200, 86.7,
League Overall 25-54 (4-14) 16-26 70. Houston 4 5 .444 4 Kansas 0-8 1-10 Pablo Larrazabal, Spa. 69-70-65—204 -6 Akron-h 2 Penn St. 27.
Wichita State 0-0 4-0 Fort Hays State — Brunson 22, Mauge 2, New Orleans 3 5 .375 41⁄2 Matt Kuchar, USA 69-69-66—204 -6 Tennessee-h pk UMass 18. (25) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 200, 68.1,
Russell 13, Nicholson 5, Congiusta 15, Konrade Saturday’s Games 26.
Bradley 0-0 3-0 Oklahoma St. 59, Texas Tech 21 Steph Gallacher, Scot. 68-68-68—204 -6 NC State-h 7 Oklahoma St.
5, Capiti 2, Wendel 4. Totals 24-49 (6-15) Northwest W L Pct GB Marcus Fraser, Aus. 67-69-68—204 -6 At Charleston-h 5 Boston College 19. (24) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 200, 72.6, 25.
Northern Iowa 0-0 3-0 Oklahoma 50, West Virginia 49
Creighton 0-0 2-0 14-23 68. Oklahoma City 7 3 .700 — Thongchai Jaidee, Thai. 72-66-67—205 -5 Dayton 4 Auburn 20. (13) Scott Lagasse Jr., Chevrolet, 199, 69,
Halftime — NW Oklahoma State 30, Fort Iowa St. 51, Kansas 23 24.
Illinois State 0-0 2-0 Minnesota 5 4 .556 11⁄2 Baylor 52, Kansas St. 24 Jyoti Randhawa, India 68-70-67—205 -5 Baylor 7 1⁄2 St. John’s
Southern Illinois 0-0 2-0 Hays State 28. 3’s — NW Oklahoma State 4-14 Utah 5 6 .455 21⁄2 Lorenzo Gagli, India 66-72-67—205 -5 Colorado 1 1⁄2 Murray St. 21. (22) Kevin Swindell, Ford, 199, 75.3, 24.
Indiana State 0-0 2-1 (Freemyer, Glover, Bell 2), Fort Hays State 6-15 Portland 4 5 .444 21⁄2 Paul Lawrie, Scot. 69-69-67—205 -5 New Mexico 7 George Mason 22. (23) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 199,
Drake 0-0 1-1 (Russell, Nicholson, Congiusta 3, Konrade).
Rebounds — NW Oklahoma State 31 (Wright
Denver 4 6 .400 3 Division II Playoffs Mark Foster, Eng.
Andrew Dodt, Aus.
69-68-68—205
65-73-68—206
-5
-4
UConn 11 Quinnipiac 66.3, 22.
23. (31) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Ford, 198, 53.7,
Missouri State 0-0 1-1 Pacific W L Pct GB First Round a-at Tampa Bay Times Forum
Evansville 0-0 1-2 8), Fort Hays State 34 (Brunson 10). Assists — Kwanchai Tannin, Thai. 68-69-69—206 -4 21.
NW Oklahoma State 11 (Freemyer and Wooley L.A. Clippers 6 2 .750 — Saturday b-at Uncasville, Conn. 24. (28) David Starr, Toyota, 198, 60.4, 0.
Shippensburg 58, Bloomsburg 20 J.M. Olazabal, Spa. 66-71-69—206 -4 c-at Sun Dome
Friday 3), Fort Hays State 19 (Nicholson 9). Golden State 5 4 .556 11⁄2 25. (19) Dakoda Armstrong, Chevrolet, 197,
Evansville 66, Yale 56 L.A. Lakers 4 5 .444 2 ⁄2
1 Indiana (Pa.) 27, Shepherd 17 d-at Oakland City, Ind. 56, 0.
Saturday Benedictine 77, Bethel 58 Phoenix 4 6 .400 3 Indianapolis 31, Midwestern State 14 LPGA e-at Chattanooga, Tenn. 26. (34) Mike Wallace, Chevrolet, 197, 45.7,
Wichita St. 69, Howard 50 Bethel — Haywood 6, Griffin 16, Watson 2, Sacramento 2 7 .222 41⁄2 West Alabama 41, Miles 7 f-at Reno, Nev. 18.
San Diego St. 60, Missouri St. 44 Howard 2, Benton 2, Moore 4, Hodge 13, Arci- Lenoir-Rhyne 21, Fort Valley State 6 CME Group Titleholders g-at San Diego 27. (30) Eric McClure, Toyota, 196, 48.5, 17.
niega 9, Eicher 4. Totals 20-47 (3-12) 15-24 58. Friday’s Games
Northern Iowa 72, North Dakota 47 Philadelphia 99, Utah 93 Northwest Missouri State 35, Harding 0 At TwinEagles Golf Club h-at San Juan, Puerto Rico 28. (21) Andrew Ranger, Ford, 195, 50.9, 16.
Indiana St. 70, Truman St. 57 Benedictine — Fisher 6, Clark 2, Anaekwe Missouri Western State 57, Minnesota Du- (The Eagle Course) i-at Ypsilanti, Mich. 29. (35) Jason Bowles, Toyota, 195, 42.7, 15.
10, Harris Jr. 2, Norville 14, Wallrapp 17, Flem- Indiana 103, Dallas 83
Bradley 79, IUPUI 72 Orlando 110, Detroit 106 luth 55 Naples, Fla. 30. (26) Hal Martin, Toyota, 195, 45.8, 14.
ing Jr. 4, Stevens 18, Messersmith 4. Totals West Texas A&M 38, Chadron State 30
Detroit 85, Drake 79
Southern Illinois 100, Benedictine 62 27-57 (4-13) 19-24 77. Golden State 106, Minnesota 98
Oklahoma City 110, New Orleans 95 Second Round
Yardage: 6,699; Par: 72 (36-36) NBA 31. (42) Danny Efland, Chevrolet, 193, 33.9,
13.
Halftime — Benedictine 36, Bethel 28. 3’s — Saturday, Nov. 24 Na Yeon Choi 67-68-69—204 -12
Western Illinois at Evansville Memphis 105, New York 95 Ai Miyazato 70-64-71—205 -11 Sunday 32. (33) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, 190, 35.1, 12.
Sunday Bethel 3-12 (Haywood 2), Hodge), Benedictine West Texas A&M (10-2) at Ashland (11-0), 10 33. (41) Robert Richardson Jr., Chevrolet,
4-13 (Fisher, Norville 3). Rebounds — Bethel Portland 119, Houston 117, OT So Yeon Ryu 66-72-68—206 -10 Favorite Line Underdog
Delaware St. at Illinois St., 2 p.m. Atlanta 112, Sacramento 96 a.m. 188, 37.6, 11.
23 (Hodge 5), Benedictine 41 (Wallrapp 10). Indiana (Pa.) (11-1) at New Haven (10-0), 11 Karine Icher 67-70-70—207 -9 at New York 71⁄2 Indiana
Presbyterian at Creighton, 2:05 p.m. L.A. Lakers 114, Phoenix 102 Brittany Lincicome 68-69-70—207 -9 34. (37) Johanna Long, Chevrolet, accident,
Assists — Bethel 13 (Howard 5), Benedictine a.m. at Toronto 51⁄2 Orlando 177, 49.6, 10.
Big 12 18 (Harris Jr. 5). Saturday’s Games Shanshan Feng 70-69-69—208 -8
Boston 107, Toronto 89 West Alabama (9-3) at Valdosta State (8-2), at Philadelphia 5 Cleveland 35. (38) Erik Darnell, Chevrolet, engine, 147,
11 a.m. Anna Nordqvist 69-70-69—208 -8 Brooklyn 3 at Sacramento
League Overall Friends 83, Bacone 63 Utah 83, Washington 76 Beatriz Recari 72-69-68—209 -7 36.4, 9.
Kansas St. 0-0 3-0 Dallas 103, Cleveland 95 Lenior-Rhyne (9-2) at Carson-Newman at Oklahoma City 9 Golden State 36. (27) John Blankenship, Chevrolet, acci-
Bacone — Palmer 0-0 2-2 2, Wilson 2-5 2-2 (8-2), 11 a.m. Brittany Lang 71-69-69—209 -7
Oklahoma St. 0-0 3-0 6, Barbaza 5-9 1-2, Bates 3-9 1-2 7, Gordon 1-3 Memphis 94, Charlotte 87 Boston 4 at Detroit dent, 92, 54.7, 8.
Shippensburg (11-1) at Winston-Salem Karrie Webb 69-69-71—209 -7 Chicago 2 at Portland
Iowa St. 0-0 2-0 0-0 2, Miles 0-3 0-0 0, Smoote 0-2 1-1 1, Stan- San Antonio 126, Denver 100 Suzann Pettersen 66-71-72—209 -7 37. (39) Juan Carlos Blum, Chevrolet, en-
Oklahoma 0-0 2-0 Milwaukee 117, New Orleans 113 (11-0), noon at L.A. Lakers 71⁄2 Houston gine, 92, 34.6, 7.
ley 2-4 1-2 5, Cooper 4-9 0-0 10, Roach 0-0 2-2 Northwest Missouri State (10-2) at Minneso- Julieta Granada 68-72-70—210 -6
Texas 0-0 2-0 2, Smith 8-18 0-0 16, Currier 0-0 0-0 0. Totals Chicago at L.A. Clippers Sandra Gal 70-68-72—210 -6 38. (12) Ryan Truex, Toyota, accident, 66,
ta State Mankato (11-0), noon
MMA
Texas Tech 0-0 2-0 25-62 (3-18) 10-14 63. Miami at Phoenix Azahara Munoz 72-72-67—211 -5 67.2, 6.
Baylor 0-0 3-1 Sunday’s Games Missouri Western State (11-1) at Henderson 39. (9) Blake Koch, Toyota, fuel pump, 40, 53,
Friends — Nelson 8-13 0-0 20, Hawkins 0-0 State (10-0), noon I.K. Kim 72-70-69—211 -5
Kansas 0-0 2-1 0-0 0, Wilson 1-4 0-0 3, Simmonds 4-4 0-0 10, Indiana at New York, 11 a.m. Sun Young Yoo 66-71-74—211 -5 5.
TCU 0-0 2-1 Orlando at Toronto, noon Indianapolis (10-2) at Colorado State-Pueb- 40. (43) Jeff Green, Toyota, vibration, 17,
Sponsel 0-0 0-0 0, Goudeau 0-1 0-0 0, Bland lo (11-0), 1 p.m. Cristie Kerr 67-74-71—212 -4
West Virginia 0-0 0-1 2-4 0-0 4, J. Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, B. Johnson 2-4 Brooklyn at Sacramento, 5 p.m. Jiyai Shin 68-73-71—212 -4 UFC 154 34.7, 4.
Cleveland at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Quarterfinals Bell Centre, Montreal, Quebec 41. (29) Chase Miller, Chevrolet, vibration, 6,
Friday 0-0 5, White 10-15 3-3 23, Anderson 0-2 0-0 0, Saturday, Dec. 1 Inbee Park 70-70-72—212 -4
Colorado 60, Baylor 58 Rausch 6-9 1-2 18, Smith 0-1 0-0 0, Williams Golden State at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Caroline Hedwall 70-69-73—212 -4 George St. Pierre (22-2) vs. Carlos Condit 32.5, 3.
Boston at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Shippensburg-Winston-Salem winner vs. In- (28-5) 42. (36) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, overheating,
Oklahoma St. 62, Tennessee 45 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-58 (13-22) 4-5 83. diana (Pa.)-New Haven winner, TBD Lizette Salas 68-71-73—212 -4
Oklahoma 63, UT-Arlington 59 Halftime — Friends 42, Bacone 35. 3’s — Ba- Chicago at Portland, 8 p.m. Cindy LaCrosse 69-72-72—213 -3 Martin Kampmann vs. Johny Hendricks 6, 30.5, 0.
Houston at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Indianapolis-Colorado State-Pueblo winner Francis Carmont vs. Tom Lawlor 43. (40) Dexter Stacey, Ford, engine, 0, 28.3,
Sunday cone 3-18 (Barbaza, Cooper 2), Friends 13-22 vs. West Texas A&M-Chadron State winner, Amy Yang 70-70-73—213 -3
North Florida at Kansas St., 1 p.m. (Nelson 4, Wilson, Simmonds 2, B. Johnson, Karin Sjodin 73-72-69—214 -2 Rafael dos Anjos vs. Mark Bocek 1.
Prairie View at TCU, 3 p.m. Rausch 5). Rebounds — Bacone 30 (Smith 11), Saturday’s Boxes TBD
Danielle Kang 69-75-70—214 -2 Mark Hominick vs. Pablo Garza
West Alabama-Valdosta State winner vs. Le- Patrick Cote def. Alessio Sakara, DQ (punch-
Baylor vs. St. John’s, 5 p.m. Friends 34 (Simmonds and White 8). Assists Celtics 107, Raptors 89 Stacy Lewis 70-72-72—214 -2
Oklahoma St. vs. North Carolina St., 5:30 — Bacone 14 (Barbaza 4), Friends 29 (Sim- TORONTO (89)—McGuire 1-4 0-0 2, Barg-
nior-Rhyne-Carson-Newman winner, TBD
Northwest Missouri State-Minnesota State Meena Lee 71-73-71—215 -1 es to back of head, R1)
Cyrille Diabate def. Chad Griggs, submission
Race Statistics
p.m. monds 6). nani 5-14 4-5 15, Valanciunas 1-4 1-1 3, Calde- Mankato winner vs. Missouri Western State- Giulia Sergas 71-72-72—215 -1
Campbell at Iowa St., 6 p.m. Lindsey Wright 67-74-74—215 -1 (R1) Average Speed of Race Winner:
Pittsburg State 85, Avila 75 ron 3-7 2-3 10, DeRozan 5-10 0-0 10, Johnson Henderson State winner, TBD
Angela Stanford 70-74-72—216 E John Makdessi def. Sam Stout, unanimous
Pittsburg State – Adams 10, Pierrevilus 0-1 1-2 1, Ross 4-6 0-1 10, Kleiza 3-9 4-7 10, 128.817 mph.
Jacqui Concolino 72-70-74—216 E decision (R3) Time of Race: 2 hours, 19 minutes, 44 sec-
College Women 14, Porter 14, Nolen 13, Ingram 14, Bullard 9,
Hays 3, Cordray 0, Pugh 3, Eaddy 0, McGee 5.
Lucas 5-11 2-2 15, Davis 2-3 3-6 7, Acy 1-1 4-4
6, Gray 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 30-70 21-31 89. Division III Playoffs Katherine Hull 70-72-74—216 E Antonio Varvalho def. Rodrigo Damm, split onds.
Pornanong Phatlum 74-75-68—217 +1 decision Margin of Victory: 1.375 seconds.
MVC Totals 24-52 34-45 85. BOSTON (107)—Pierce 6-15 6-6 19, Bass First Round Matt Riddle def. John Maguire, unanimous
3-7 0-0 6, Garnett 6-7 3-4 15, Rondo 3-4 0-0 6, Saturday Yani Tseng 75-73-69—217 +1 Caution Flags: 5 for 24 laps.
League Overall Avila – Redmond 17, Chapman 2, Johnson Pernilla Lindberg 72-75-70—217 +1 decision
10, Miller 16, Churchman 16, Taylor 7, Fairlee Terry 7-10 2-2 20, Wilcox 4-8 0-1 8, Sullinger Hobart 38, Washington & Lee 20 Lead Changes: 13 among 10 drivers.
Bradley 0-0 2-1 Mika Miyazato 71-75-71—217 +1 Ivan Menjivar def. azamat Gashimov, sub- Lap Leaders: K.Busch 1-49;J.Logano
0, Everson 0, Henderson 5, Lowe 2, Raney 0. 5-8 2-2 12, Lee 2-5 0-0 4, Barbosa 3-6 1-2 8, Wittenberg 52, Heidelberg 38 mission (R1)
Evansville 0-0 2-1 Green 4-6 1-2 9. Totals 43-76 15-19 107. Franklin 42, Adrian 10 Ilhee Lee 72-72-73—217 +1 50;K.Busch 51-67;E.Sadler 68-70;K.Busch
Indiana State 0-0 2-1 Totals 26-62 18-26 75. Hee Kyung Seo 71-73-73—217 +1 Darren Elkins def. Steven Siler, unanimous
Halftime score — Pittsburg State 36, Avila Cortland State 20, Framingham State 19 71-93;R.Smith 94-95;D.Patrick
Northern Iowa 0-0 2-1 Toronto 17 25 22 25 — 89 Lexi Thompson 71-73-73—217 +1 decision 96-99;S.Hornish Jr. 100-105;A.Dillon
31. 3s — Pittsburg State 3-12 (Pierrevilus, Boston 30 17 32 28 — 107 Wesley 73, Mount Ida 14
Creighton 0-0 1-1 Widener 44, Bridgewater State 14 Paula Creamer 72-71-74—217 +1 106-148;R.Stenhouse Jr. 149-150;K.Wallace
Porter, Pugh), Avila 5-12 (Miller 4, Church-
Illinois State
Missouri State
Wichita State
Drake
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
1-1
1-1
1-1
0-1
man). Rebounds —Pittsburg State 39
(7-Nolen, McGee), Avila 36 (Redmond 9). As-
sists — Pittsburg State 14 (Porter 5), Avila 11
3-Point Goals—Toronto 8-22 (Lucas 3-7,
Calderon 2-3, Ross 2-4, Bargnani 1-5, DeRozan
0-1, Kleiza 0-2), Boston 6-15 (Terry 4-7, Barbo-
sa 1-2, Pierce 1-5, Rondo 0-1). Fouled Out-
10
Salisbury 17, Rowan 9
Johns Hopkins 42, Washington & Jefferson
Loyola Marymount 98, Utah St. 81 Central W L Pct GB CS Northridge-g 8 N. Kentucky 10. (8) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 200, 92.4, 34.
UBS Hong Kong Open Kansas 3, TCU 0
Nevada 72, UC Irvine 49
Santa Clara 80, Utah Valley 67 Milwaukee 6 2 .750 —
Big 12 At Hong Kong Golf Club
at Nebraska
Portland
17
2
Nebraska-Omaha
at Montana St.
11. (6) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 200, 93.1, Texas Tech 3, Kansas St. 1
League Overall 33.
Chicago 5 3 .625 1 Hong Kong IPFW-i 51⁄2 E. Illinois 12. (32) Michael Annett, Ford, 200, 80.9, 32.
Indiana 4 6 .400 3 Kansas St. 7-1 10-1 Yardage: 6,734; Par: 70 (34-36)
WWW.KANSAS.COM SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 ■ THE WICHITA EAGLE 11D
SCOREBOARD
— Allen 7-24 (Schippers 3, Barnette 3, Rob- Walker 6-17 5-6 17, Taylor 1-2 2-2 4, Gordon Martinko 5-90, Johnson 4-50, Gordon 1-17, Silver Lake (13-0) vs. Scott City (13-0), 1 p.m. 13. Kyle Busch, 1,091; 14. Ryan Newman,
BASEBALL Kansas St.
Oklahoma St.
Texas
Iowa St.
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
2-0
2-0
2-0
1-0
erts), Hutchinson 3-11 (Allen, Spencer, Hen-
ley). Rebounds—Allen 32 (Rountree 8),
Hutchinson 52 (Davis 16). Assists—Allen 12
4-10 0-0 10, Thomas 0-6 0-0 0, Biyombo 2-6
0-0 4, Sessions 6-11 0-0 12, Williams 0-2 0-0 0,
Warrick 1-2 3-6 5. Totals 32-85 19-28 87.
Benson 1-33, Bellard 1-19, McClee 1-35,
Thornton 1-6, Owens 1-8. Class 2-1A
Friday’s Semifinals
1,009; 15. Carl Edwards, 998.
Formula One
(Schippers 3), Hutchinson 19 (Davis 5). Foul- Centralia 34, Lyndon 14
MLB
Baylor
Oklahoma
0-0
0-0
2-1
1-1 s—Allen 25, Hutchinson 15.
Memphis
Charlotte
25 22 28 19 — 94
19 19 22 27 — 87
Juco Meade 34, La Crosse 12
TCU 0-0 1-1 Championship United States Grand Prix
Free Agent Signings 3-Point Goals—Memphis 2-14 (Conley 1-3, Salt City Bowl Nov. 24 at Lewis Stadium, Hays Lineup
NEW YORK (AP) — The nine free agents who
Texas Tech 0-0 1-1
Small College Women Gay 1-4, Bayless 0-1, Pondexter 0-2, Ellington Sunday, Dec. 1 Centralia (12-0) vs. Meade (11-1), 1 p.m.
After Saturday qualifying;race Sunday
Wednesday 0-4), Charlotte 4-13 (Mullens 2-4, Gordon 2-5, Iowa Central (6-4) at Hutchinson (8-3), 1
have signed, with name, position, former club Charlotte 82, TCU 68 Fort Hays 93, NW Oklahoma p.m. 8-Man I At Circuit of the Americas
if different, and contract. The contract infor- Williams 0-1, Walker 0-1, Sessions 0-2). Austin, Texas
UCLA 86, Oklahoma 80 Fouled Out—Gay, Biyombo. Rebound- Today’s Championship
mation was obtained by The Associated Press Kansas 68, SE Missouri 58 53 Mississippi Bowl At Fischer Field, Newton Lap length: 3.427 miles
from player and management sources. NW Oklahoma State – Simmons 17, Golli- s—Memphis 54 (Randolph 12), Charlotte 61 Third Session
Thursday (Mullens 9). Assists—Memphis 17 (Gasol 7), Sunday, Dec. 1 Ness City 40, Rock Hills 8
American League New Mexico 65, Texas Tech 61 day 9, Norman 4, Baca 2, Gibson 1, K. Gilmore At Biloxi, Miss. 1. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 1
BOSTON (2) — Re-signed David Ortiz, dh, to Friday 10, D. Gilmore 3, Catlett 1, Fonteno 4, Rich- Charlotte 17 (Walker 8). Total Fouls—Mem-
Copiah-Lincoln (9-2) vs. Garden City (6-4), 8-Man II minute, 35.657 seconds.
a $26 million, two-year contract;signed David mond 2. Totals 20-52 (4-14) 9-13 53. phis 23, Charlotte 25. Technicals—Allen, Today’s Championship 2. Lewis Hamilton, England, McLaren,
Stanford 71, Baylor 69 Charlotte defensive three second. A—16,541 TBA
Ross, c, Atlanta, to a $6.2 million, two-year TCU 61, Central Florida 55 Fort Hays State — Edwards 14, Keyser 7, At Fischer Field, Newton 1:35.766.
contract. Saturday Lehman 23, Brown 4, Nelson 15, Bohuslavsky (19,077). Graphic Edge Bowl Baileyville 28, Thunder Ridge 6 3. Mark Webber, Australia, Red Bull,
OAKLAND (1) — Re-signed Bartolo Colon, West Virginia 75, USC Upstate 45 6, Sorenson 6, Shaw 5, Russell 1, Lunsford 4,
Mavericks 103, Cavaliers 95 Sunday, Dec. 2 1:36.174.
At Cedar Falls, Iowa
HOCKEY
rhp, to a $3 million, one-year contract. Baylor vs. Tenneseee Martin Ingalsbe 8. Totals 29-57 (2-14) 33-41. 4. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 1:36.587.
SEATTLE (1) — Re-signed Oliver Perez, lhp, Halftime — Fort Hays State 48, NW Oklaho- DALLAS (103)—Brand 0-2 0-0 0, Marion 4-7 Butler (11-0) vs. Iowa Western (11-0), 3 p.m. 5. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Lotus, 1:36.708.
Sunday 2-2 10, Kaman 6-12 3-4 15, Collison 5-8 4-5 14,
to a $1.5 million, one-year contract. North Dakota at Iowa St., 1 p.m. ma State 26. 3’s — NW Oklahoma State 4-14 6. Michael Schumacher, Germany, Mercedes,
Mayo 5-9 6-6 19, Carter 5-10 1-2 14, Murphy
GOLF
TEXAS (1) — Re-signed Colby Lewis, rhp, to Weber St. at Oklahoma St., 2 p.m. (Simmons, K. Gilmore 2, D. Gilmore), Fort 1:36.794.
a $2 million, one-year contract. Hays State 2-14 (Nelson, Bohuslavsky). Re- 3-6 0-0 9, Do.Jones 5-11 0-0 10, James 2-5 0-0 7. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Ferrari, 1:36.937.
Saint Louis at Oklahoma, 2 p.m.
TORONTO (1) — Signed Maicer Izturis, inf, Wake Forest at Kansas, 2 p.m. bounds — NW Oklahoma State 27 (three with
four), Fort Hays State 40 (Edwards 7). Assists
4, Crowder 0-1 0-0 0, Wright 2-2 1-1 5, Da-
.Jones 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 38-74 17-20 103.
CHL 8. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Force India,
Los Angeles Angels, to a $10 million, three- Lipscomb at Texas Tech, 2 p.m. 1:37.141.
year contract. — NW Oklahoma State 5 (K. Gilmore 3), Fort CLEVELAND (95)—Gee 6-16 3-5 15, GP W L OL Pts GF GA 9. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 1:37.300.
Baylor vs. Hawaii, 6:30 p.m.
National League Hays State 20 (three with four). Thompson 5-12 0-0 10, Varejao 2-11 0-0 4, Ir-
ving 11-21 2-3 26, Waiters 4-16 7-8 16, Gibson Europe Allen 11 9 2 0 18 45 30 10. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams,
CHICAGO (1) — Signed Scott Baker, rhp, Taylor 75, Tabor 72 Bloomington 11 7 3 1 15 50 37 1:37.842.
Minnesota, to a $5.5 million, one-year con- Major College Men Taylor – Fouch 3, Freds 2, Guarneri 21, Bry-
5-11 2-2 16, Zeller 1-4 1-2 3, Pargo 0-1 0-0 0,
Casspi 2-4 0-0 5. Totals 36-96 15-20 95.
South African Open Arizona 13 6 4 3 15 37 38 Eliminated after second session
tract. TOURNAMENT ant 10, Redweik 24, Rudolph 8, Daniels 2, At Serengeti Golf & Wildlife Estate Wichita 12 6 5 1 13 45 36 11. Bruno Senna, Brazil, Williams, 1:37.604.
LOS ANGELES (1) — Re-signed Brandon USVI Paradise Jam Dallas 24 27 24 28 — 103 Ekurhuleni, South Africa Tulsa 13 6 6 1 13 37 47 12. Jenson Button, England, McLaren,
Wood 5. Totals 26-59 (5-13) 18-24 75. Cleveland 24 28 21 22 — 95
League, rhp, to a $22.5 million, three-year Ill.-Chicago 62, Mercer 36 Tabor — Smith 4, Lewis 20, Mary 4, Oliver 2, Yardage: 7,761; Par: 72 (36-36) Rapid City 11 6 5 0 12 29 30 1:37.616.
contract. Iona 94, Wake Forest 68 Paust 8, Moran 6, Rust 20, Bryan 1, Honn 7. Partial second round Denver 11 5 6 0 10 42 39 13. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India,
SAN FRANCISCO (1) — Re-signed Jeremy 3-Point Goals—Dallas 10-23 (Mayo 3-5, 1:37.665.
Coaches vs. Cancer Classic Totals Totals 25-64 (7-27) 15-24 72. Carter 3-6, Murphy 3-6, Da.Jones 1-1, Collison Henrik Stenson, Swe. 65-65-69—200 -16 Quad City 9 4 3 2 10 28 31
Affeldt, lhp, to an $18 million, three-year con- Third Place Halftime — Taylor 40, Tabor 34. 3’s — Taylor George Coetzee, SAfr. 70-70-63—203 -13 Missouri 11 4 5 2 10 35 43 14. Jean-Eric Vergne, France, Toro Rosso,
tract. 0-1, Marion 0-1, Crowder 0-1, Do.Jones 0-2), 1:37.879.
Notre Dame 78, BYU 68 5-13 (Fouch, Guarneri 3, Bryant), Tabor 7-27 Cleveland 8-25 (Gibson 4-8, Irving 2-7, Casspi Magnus Carlsson, Swe. 68-67-68—203 -13 Fort Worth 10 3 5 2 8 21 38
USVI Paradise Jam Darren Fichardt, SAfr. 68-70-68—206 -10 Friday’s Games 15. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Sauber, 1:38.206.
Remaining Free Agent (Lewis, Moran 2, Rust 4). Rebounds — Raylor 1-2, Waiters 1-4, Pargo 0-1, Gee 0-3). Fouled 16. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Sauber,
Third Place 47 (Guarneri 13), Tabor 35 (Honn 6). Assists — Out—None. Rebounds—Dallas 50 (Marion Merrick Bremner, SAfr. 64-70-73—207 -9 Quad City 3, Wichita 1
Signings Ill.-Chicago 62, Mercer 36 Taylor 15 (Freds 4), Tabor 14 (Lewis 8). 10), Cleveland 54 (Thompson 12). Assists- Martin Kaymer, Ger. 70-70-68—208 -8 Bloomington 5, Tulsa 2 1:38.437.
American League Iona 94, Wake Forest 68 Thomas Aiken, SAfr. 73-66-69—208 -8 Denver 2, Arizona 1, SO 17. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes,
—Dallas 26 (Collison 8), Cleveland 21 (Gibson 1:38.501.
BALTIMORE (7) — Endy Chavez, of;Bill Hall, EAST 5). Total Fouls—Dallas 19, Cleveland 15. Matthew Carvell, SAfr. 66-72-70—208 -8 Fort Worth 2, Rapid City 1
of;Nick Johnson, dh;Nate McLouth, of;Joe Albany (NY) 62, UMKC 59 JuCo Women Technicals—Kaman, Cleveland defensive Allan Versfeld, SAfr. 69-69-70—208 -8 Saturday’s Games Eliminated after first session
18. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Toro Rosso,
Saunders, lhp;Jim Thome, dh;Randy Wolf, lhp. Bryant 76, New Hampshire 64 three second 2. A—18,633 (20,562). Michael Jonzon, Swe. 68-69-71—208 -8 Arizona at Wichita
BOSTON (6) — Aaron Cook, rhp;James Lo- Bucknell 62, New Mexico St. 49 Hutchinson 66, South Plains Shaun Norris, SAfr. 72-70-67—209 -7 Tulsa at Allen 1:39.114.
ney, 1b;Daisuke Matsuzaka, rhp;Vicente Padil- Canisius 72, St. Bonaventure 69 Bucks 117, Hornets 113 Michiel Bothma, SAfr. 69-69-71—209 -7 Quad City at Bloomington 19. Timo Glock, Germany, Marussia,
61 1:40.056.
la, rhp;Scott Podsednik, of;Cody Ross, of. Drexel 61, Penn 59 Hutchinson – Sorrells 10, Walter 18, Pat- NEW ORLEANS (113)—Aminu 4-7 0-0 9, Trevor Fisher Jr., SAfr. 69-70-71—210 -6 Rapid City at Missouri
CHICAGO (8) — Brian Bruney, rhp;Orlando George Washington 72, Boston U. 59 Davis 10-14 8-9 28, Lopez 4-4 0-0 8, Vasquez Tom Fleetwood, Eng. 70-69-71—210 -6 Fort Worth at Denver 20. Charles Pic, France, Marussia, 1:40.664.
rick 6, Starks 3, Hill 4, Crawford 2, Herl 8, Pat- 21. Vitaly Petrov, Russia, Caterham,
Hudson, 2b;Francisco Liriano, lhp;Jose Lopez, Hofstra 74, Dist. of Columbia 59 terson 15. Totals 21-52 (3-11) 21-34 66. 5-16 1-1 13, Rivers 0-2 6-6 6, Roberts 3-5 2-2 Jake Roos, South Africa 68-71-71—210 -6 Sunday’s Games
c;Brett Myers, rhp;A.J. Pierzynski, c;Dewayne Loyola (Md.) 65, Norfolk St. 49 8, Mason 4-8 0-0 10, Anderson 8-15 0-0 20, Marc Warren, Scot. 70-69-71—210 -6 Rapid City at Quad City, 4:05 p.m. 1:40.809.
South Plains — Dawn 3, T. Moore 23, Brai- 22. Heikki Kovalainen, Finland, Caterham,
Wise, of;Kevin Youkilis, 3b. Marist 67, Columbia 62 nard 2, Turner 2, Myatt 3, Lee 8, Hearn 17, S. Smith 2-4 4-4 8, Miller 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 41-77 Jaco van Zyl, SAfr. 70-72-68—210 -6
1:41.166.
CLEVELAND (4) — Travis Hafner, dh;Roberto
Hernandez, rhp;Casey Kotchman, 1b;Grady
Sizemore, of.
DETROIT (4) — Gerald Laird, c;Anibal San-
Ohio St. 69, Rhode Island 58
Rider 65, Monmouth (NJ) 62
S. Dakota St. 78, Marshall 77
Yale 63, Buffalo 59
Moore 3. Totals 23-63 (6-16) 9-13 61.
Halftime — Hutchinson 29, South Plains 20.
3’s — Hutchinson 3-11 (Patrick, Herl 2), South
Plains 6-16 (Dawn, T. Moore 4, Myatt). Re-
21-22 113.
MILWAUKEE (117)—Harris 4-9 0-0 10, Ilya-
sova 5-10 0-0 10, Dalembert 6-10 3-3 15, Jen-
nings 8-16 2-3 22, Ellis 8-16 6-6 22, Dunleavy
Peter Whiteford, Scot. 69-69-72—210 -6
Charl Schwartzel, SAfr. 68-68-74—210 -6
Talisker Masters
LATEST LINE 23. Pedro de la Rosa, Spain, HRT, 1:42.011.
24. Narain Karthikeyan, India, HRT, 1:42.740.
MMA
Sandra Gal 70-68-72—210 -6 67.2, 6.
SAN DIEGO (1) — Jason Marquis, rhp. Wiley 71, Stephen F. Austin 68 Miami at Phoenix Missouri Western State (11-1) at Henderson Azahara Munoz 72-72-67—211 -5 39. (9) Blake Koch, Toyota, fuel pump, 40, 53,
SAN FRANCISCO (9) — Melky Cabrera, FAR WEST Sunday’s Games State (10-0), noon I.K. Kim 72-70-69—211 -5 5.
of;Aubrey Huff, 1b;Guillermo Mota, rhp;Xavier Arizona 53, CS Northridge 46 Indiana at New York, 11 a.m. Indianapolis (10-2) at Colorado State-Pueb- Sun Young Yoo 66-71-74—211 -5 40. (43) Jeff Green, Toyota, vibration, 17,
Nady, of;Angel Pagan, of;Brad Penny, rhp;Fred- Cal Poly 69, San Diego 50 Orlando at Toronto, noon lo (11-0), 1 p.m. Cristie Kerr 67-74-71—212 -4 UFC 154 34.7, 4.
dy Sanchez, 2b;Marco Scutaro, inf;Ryan The- Cal St.-Fullerton 60, San Francisco 55 Brooklyn at Sacramento, 5 p.m. Quarterfinals Jiyai Shin 68-73-71—212 -4 Bell Centre, Montreal, Quebec 41. (29) Chase Miller, Chevrolet, vibration, 6,
riot, 2b. Colorado St. 58, Seattle 55 Cleveland at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 1 Inbee Park 70-70-72—212 -4 George St. Pierre (22-2) vs. Carlos Condit 32.5, 3.
WASHINGTON (7) — Sean Burnett, lhp;Mark Idaho St. 83, Air Force 51 Golden State at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Shippensburg-Winston-Salem winner vs. In- Caroline Hedwall 70-69-73—212 -4 (28-5) 42. (36) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, overheating,
DeRosa, of;Zach Duke, lhp;Mike Gonzalez, Loyola Marymount 98, Utah St. 81 Boston at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. diana (Pa.)-New Haven winner, TBD Lizette Salas 68-71-73—212 -4 Martin Kampmann vs. Johny Hendricks 6, 30.5, 0.
lhp;Edwin Jackson, rhp;x-Adam LaRoche, Nevada 72, UC Irvine 49 Chicago at Portland, 8 p.m. Indianapolis-Colorado State-Pueblo winner Cindy LaCrosse 69-72-72—213 -3 Francis Carmont vs. Tom Lawlor 43. (40) Dexter Stacey, Ford, engine, 0, 28.3,
1b;Chien-Ming Wang, rhp. Santa Clara 80, Utah Valley 67 Houston at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. vs. West Texas A&M-Chadron State winner, Amy Yang 70-70-73—213 -3 Rafael dos Anjos vs. Mark Bocek 1.
TBD Karin Sjodin 73-72-69—214 -2
Saturday’s Boxes Mark Hominick vs. Pablo Garza
MOTORSPORTS
Indiana State 0-0 2-1 106-148;R.Stenhouse Jr. 149-150;K.Wallace
Drake 0-0 1-1 (Russell, Nicholson, Congiusta 3, Konrade). 3-Point Goals—Toronto 8-22 (Lucas 3-7, Salisbury 17, Rowan 9 Jennifer Johnson 70-71-76—217 +1 151-152;A.Dillon 153-175;K.Swindell
Missouri State 0-0 1-1 Rebounds — NW Oklahoma State 31 (Wright Calderon 2-3, Ross 2-4, Bargnani 1-5, DeRozan Johns Hopkins 42, Washington & Jefferson Jennifer Song 72-77-69—218 +2 176-178;R.Smith 179-200.
Evansville 0-0 1-2 8), Fort Hays State 34 (Brunson 10). Assists — 0-1, Kleiza 0-2), Boston 6-15 (Terry 4-7, Barbo- 10 Candie Kung 74-74-70—218 +2 Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led,
NW Oklahoma State 11 (Freemyer and Wooley sa 1-2, Pierce 1-5, Rondo 0-1). Fouled Out- Mount Union 72, Christopher Newport 14 Vicky Hurst 72-74-72—218 +2 Laps Led): K.Busch, 3 times for 89 laps;A.Dil-
Friday
Evansville 66, Yale 56
3), Fort Hays State 19 (Nicholson 9). —Valanciunas. Rebounds—Toronto 43 (Da- Mary Hardin-Baylor 59, Louisiana College 20
St. Thomas (Minn.) 48, St. Norbert 17
Mina Harigae
Catriona Matthew
72-71-75—218 +2
72-77-70—219 +3
Sprint Cup lon, 2 times for 66 laps;R.Smith, 2 times for 24
laps;S.Hornish Jr., 1 time for 6 laps;D.Patrick, 1
Saturday Benedictine 77, Bethel 58 vis 9), Boston 44 (Sullinger 11). Assists—To-
ronto 22 (Calderon 9), Boston 37 (Rondo 20). Elmhurst 27, Coe 24 Jenny Shin 74-74-71—219 +3 Ford EcoBoost 400 Lineup time for 4 laps;E.Sadler, 1 time for 3 laps;K-
Wichita St. 69, Howard 50 Bethel — Haywood 6, Griffin 16, Watson 2, Bethel (Minn.) 24, Concordia-Chicago 23 Mariajo Uribe 76-72-71—219 +3
San Diego St. 60, Missouri St. 44 Howard 2, Benton 2, Moore 4, Hodge 13, Arci- Total Fouls—Toronto 23, Boston 23. Tech- After Friday qualifying; race Sunday .Swindell, 1 time for 3 laps;R.Stenhouse Jr., 1
nicals—Boston defensive three second. Wisconsin-Oshkosh 55, St. Scholastica 10 Chella Choi 71-76-72—219 +3 time for 2 laps;K.Wallace, 1 time for 2 laps;J-
Northern Iowa 72, North Dakota 47 niega 9, Eicher 4. Totals 20-47 (3-12) 15-24 58. Linfield 27, Pacific Lutheran 24 At Homestead-Miami Speedway
A—18,624 (18,624). Hee Young Park 76-68-75—219 +3 Homestead, Fla. .Logano, 1 time for 1 lap.
Indiana St. 70, Truman St. 57 Benedictine — Fisher 6, Clark 2, Anaekwe North Central (Ill.) 41, Cal Lutheran 21 Gerina Piller 76-74-70—220 +4
Bradley 79, IUPUI 72 10, Harris Jr. 2, Norville 14, Wallrapp 17, Flem- Lap length: 1.5 miles Final Season Points Standings: 1.
ing Jr. 4, Stevens 18, Messersmith 4. Totals
Spurs 126, Nuggets 100 Second Round Natalie Gulbis 79-70-71—220 +4 (Car number in parentheses) R.Stenhouse Jr., 1,251;2. E.Sadler, 1,228;3.
Detroit 85, Drake 79 Saturday, Nov. 24 Sydnee Michaels 74-75-71—220 +4
Southern Illinois 100, Benedictine 62 27-57 (4-13) 19-24 77. DENVER (100)—Faried 5-8 4-6 14, Gallinari 1. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 176.056. A.Dillon, 1,227;4. S.Hornish Jr., 1,146;5. M.An-
7-13 1-1 15, Koufos 1-3 0-0 2, Lawson 5-13 3-5 Linfield (10-0) vs. North Central, Ill. (9-2), Haeji Kang 72-72-77—221 +5 nett, 1,082;6. J.Allgaier, 1,076;7. C.Whitt,
Western Illinois at Evansville Halftime — Benedictine 36, Bethel 28. 3’s — TBD 2. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 175.342.
13, Iguodala 3-8 3-4 9, McGee 6-10 0-0 12, Nicole Castrale 74-74-74—222 +6 3. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 175.092. 994;8. M.Bliss, 902;9. B.Scott, 853;10. D.Pa-
Sunday Bethel 3-12 (Haywood 2), Hodge), Benedictine Bethel (Minn.) (9-2) vs. Wisconsin-Oshkosh Dewi Claire Schreefel 73-75-74—222 +6
Delaware St. at Illinois St., 2 p.m. 4-13 (Fisher, Norville 3). Rebounds — Bethel A.Miller 1-2 2-2 4, Brewer 4-9 3-4 13, Mozgov 4. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 175.001. trick, 838.
2-2 0-0 4, Hamilton 1-5 1-2 4, Fournier 4-5 1-2 (11-0), TBD Mo Martin 73-73-76—222 +6
Presbyterian at Creighton, 2:05 p.m. 23 (Hodge 5), Benedictine 41 (Wallrapp 10). Hobart (11-0) vs. Wittenberg (10-1), TBD 5. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 174.887.
Jodi Ewart 74-72-77—223 +7
Kansas St.
Big 12
League
0-0
Overall
3-0
Assists — Bethel 13 (Howard 5), Benedictine
18 (Harris Jr. 5).
Friends 83, Bacone 63
10. Totals 39-78 18-26 100.
SAN ANTONIO (126)—Jackson 4-11 0-0 9,
Duncan 4-8 5-6 14, Blair 7-10 5-6 19, Parker
7-13 0-0 14, Green 6-10 0-0 15, Ginobili 7-10
Elmhurst (10-1) vs. St. Thomas (Minn.)
(11-0), TBD
Mary Hardin-Baylor (11-0) vs. Franklin (9-2),
Jennie Lee
Morgan Pressel
Alison Walshe
71-74-78—223 +7
73-79-72—224 +8
78-73-73—224 +8
6. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 174.752.
7. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 174.644.
8. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 174.565.
9. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 174.452.
RUNNING
Bacone — Palmer 0-0 2-2 2, Wilson 2-5 2-2 1-2 20, Diaw 3-4 2-2 9, Splitter 2-5 1-2 5, Mills TBD Jane Rah 74-74-76—224 +8
Oklahoma St. 0-0 3-0 10. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet,
Iowa St. 0-0 2-0 6, Barbaza 5-9 1-2, Bates 3-9 1-2 7, Gordon 1-3 4-10 0-0 10, De Colo 1-3 2-2 5, Bonner 2-4 0-0
6. Totals 47-88 16-20 126.
Cortland State (9-1) vs. Wesley (9-1), TBD
Widener (10-0) vs. Salisbury (9-2), TBD
Sarah Jane Smith
Eun-Hee Ji
73-77-75—225 +9
74-75-76—225 +9
174.081. Turkey Trot
Oklahoma 0-0 2-0 0-0 2, Miles 0-3 0-0 0, Smoote 0-2 1-1 1, Stan- 11. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 173.98.
ley 2-4 1-2 5, Cooper 4-9 0-0 10, Roach 0-0 2-2 Johns Hopkins (10-1) vs. Mount Union Belen Mozo 71-77-77—225 +9 10 Mile
Texas 0-0 2-0 Denver 15 25 28 32 — 100 (11-0), TBD 12. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 173.969.
2, Smith 8-18 0-0 16, Currier 0-0 0-0 0. Totals Jessica Korda 76-71-78—225 +9 13. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 173.93. Overall male – 1. Bryant Keirns, 55:59.
Texas Tech 0-0 2-0 San Antonio 33 27 30 36 — 126 Mi Jung Hur 75-78-73—226+10
Baylor 0-0 3-1 25-62 (3-18) 10-14 63. 14. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 173.807. Age graded masters — 1. Keith Long,
Kansas 0-0 2-1 Friends — Nelson 8-13 0-0 20, Hawkins 0-0
0-0 0, Wilson 1-4 0-0 3, Simmonds 4-4 0-0 10,
3-Point Goals—Denver 4-11 (Brewer 2-3,
Hamilton 1-2, Fournier 1-2, Iguodala 0-1, Law-
NAIA Playoffs Maria Hjorth
Michelle Wie
80-74-73—227+11
81-77-71—229+13
15. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 173.74. 50:02. 3-17 — 1. Colby Kromminga, Winfield,
1:00:43. 18-29 — 1. Michael Gurley, 57:22.
TCU 0-0 2-1 First Round 16. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
Sponsel 0-0 0-0 0, Goudeau 0-1 0-0 0, Bland son 0-1, Gallinari 0-2), San Antonio 16-27 (Gi- Veronica Felibert 79-73-77—229+13 173.472. 30-34 — 1. Andrew Bird, Park City, 58:57.
West Virginia 0-0 0-1 Saturday Kristy McPherson 71-81-77—229+13
2-4 0-0 4, J. Johnson 0-0 0-0 0, B. Johnson 2-4 nobili 5-7, Green 3-5, Bonner 2-3, Mills 2-3, 17. (22) Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge, 173.11. 35-39 — 1. Jesse Ramos, Wichita, 1:08:49.
Friday 0-0 5, White 10-15 3-3 23, Anderson 0-2 0-0 0, Diaw 1-1, Duncan 1-1, De Colo 1-2, Jackson St. Francis (Ind.) 22, Baker (Kan.) 17 Hee-Won Han 72-79-78—229+13
Cumberlands (Ky.) 42, MidAmerica Nazarene 18. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 173.077. 40-44 — 1. Bob Hornung, 1:03:24. 45-49
Colorado 60, Baylor 58 Rausch 6-9 1-2 18, Smith 0-1 0-0 0, Williams 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Den- Tanya Dergal 74-81-75—230 +14 19. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 172.988. — 1. David Leib, Wichita, 1:09:08. 50-54 —
Oklahoma St. 62, Tennessee 45 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-58 (13-22) 4-5 83. ver 46 (McGee 8), San Antonio 46 (Jackson 9). (Kan.) 24
Marian (Ind.) 42, Northwestern (Iowa) 32 20. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 172.662. 1. Micol Tice, Wichita, 1:09:44. 55-59 — 1.
Oklahoma 63, UT-Arlington 59 Assists—Denver 19 (Lawson 5), San Antonio
Sunday
North Florida at Kansas St., 1 p.m.
Prairie View at TCU, 3 p.m.
Halftime — Friends 42, Bacone 35. 3’s — Ba-
cone 3-18 (Barbaza, Cooper 2), Friends 13-22
(Nelson 4, Wilson, Simmonds 2, B. Johnson,
Rausch 5). Rebounds — Bacone 30 (Smith 11),
33 (Parker 6). Total Fouls—Denver 19, San
Antonio 21. A—18,581 (18,797).
Morningside (Iowa) 40, Montana Tech 35
Saint Xavier (Ill.) 31, William Penn (Iowa) 0
Southern Oregon 45, Saint Ambrose (Iowa)
HIGH SCHOOLS 21. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet,
172.64.
22. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 172.563.
23. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 172.546.
Keith Long, 59:18. 60-64 — 1. Dale bing,
Wichita, 1:06:57. 65-99 — 1. R.G. Fazio,
Wichita, 1:13:48. Overall female — 1. Ra-
quel Stucky, 1:00:12. Age graded masters
Baylor vs. St. John’s, 5 p.m. Friends 34 (Simmonds and White 8). Assists Jazz 83, Wizards 76 28
24. (51) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 172.507. — 1. Deborah Torneden, Andover, 56:40.
Oklahoma St. vs. North Carolina St., 5:30
p.m.
— Bacone 14 (Barbaza 4), Friends 29 (Sim- UTAH (83)—Favors 3-10 3-4 9, Millsap 2-13
2-4 6, Jefferson 10-19 1-2 21, M. Williams 5-11
Missouri Valley 56, Ottawa (Kan.) 21
Bethel (Tenn.) 45, Georgetown (Ky.) 44
Football Playoffs 25. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 172.474. 3-17 — 1. Karrie McNutt, 1:18:00. 18-24 —
monds 6). 26. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 172.265. 1. Elise Terrell, 1:20:33. 25-29 — 1. Amanda
Campbell at Iowa St., 6 p.m. 1-1 12, Foye 1-5 0-0 2, Ma.Williams 2-5 3-6 7, Quarterfinals Class 6A
Pittsburg State 85, Avila 75 Saturday, Nov. 24 27. (6) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 172.106. Messenger, Wichita, 1:06:11. 30-34 — 1.
Hayward 4-10 6-6 15, Kanter 2-3 0-0 4, Tinsley Friday’s Semifinals 28. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 172.057. Katie Siegrist, Wichita, 1:12:13. 35-39 — 1.
Pittsburg State – Adams 10, Pierrevilus 0-1 0-0 0, Carroll 2-5 3-4 7. Totals 31-82 19-27 TBA
College Women 14, Porter 14, Nolen 13, Ingram 14, Bullard 9, 83. Missouri Valley 56, Ottawa
SM West 48, Lawrence Free State 21
Hutchinson 29, Derby 28
29. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 171.881.
30. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 171.756.
Angela Vetter, Andover, 1:15:22. 40-44 — 1.
Michelle Adler, Winfield, 1:16:07. 45-49 — 1.
Hays 3, Cordray 0, Pugh 3, Eaddy 0, McGee 5. WASHINGTON (76)—Ariza 7-15 1-3 16,
MVC Totals 24-52 34-45 85. Championship 31. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 171.745. Michelle Zane, Wichita, 1:19:09. 50-59 — 1.
Vesely 2-6 1-2 5, Okafor 4-10 0-0 8, Price 3-5 21 Nov. 24 at Yager Stadium, Topeka 32. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 171.679. Deborah Torneden, Andover, 1:05:00. 60-99
League Overall Avila – Redmond 17, Chapman 2, Johnson 0-0 8, Crawford 7-18 5-5 20, Booker 0-2 0-0 0,
10, Miller 16, Churchman 16, Taylor 7, Fairlee Ottawa 0 7 7 7 — 21 SM West (11-1) vs. Hutchinson (10-2), 1 p.m. 33. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 171.63. — 1. Barbara Holzman, Wichita, 1:19:26.
Bradley 0-0 2-1 Seraphin 3-11 0-0 6, Martin 1-8 0-0 3, Beal 3-6 34. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 171.581. Two Mile
Evansville 0-0 2-1 0, Everson 0, Henderson 5, Lowe 2, Raney 0. 0-0 6, Livingston 1-3 2-2 4, Singleton 0-1 0-0 Missouri Valley 15 15 7 19 — 56 Class 5A
Totals 26-62 18-26 75. 35. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 171.483. Male 3-10 — 1. Myles Torneden, Andover,
Indiana State 0-0 2-1 0. Totals 31-85 9-12 76. Friday’s Semifinals 36. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 171.445. 13:44. 11-14 — 1. Nicholas May, 11:09.
Northern Iowa 0-0 2-1 Halftime score — Pittsburg State 36, Avila MV — Safety
Utah 15 23 27 18 — 83 MV — Black 79 KO ret. (run failed) Bishop Miege 9, St. Thomas Aquinas 7 37. (10) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, 15-17 — 1. Jeremy Brittain, Wichita, 10:43.
Creighton 0-0 1-1 31. 3s — Pittsburg State 3-12 (Pierrevilus, Bishop Carroll 45, Salina South 21
Porter, Pugh), Avila 5-12 (Miller 4, Church- Washington 17 23 23 13 — 76 MV — Dukes 10 run (Miramontes kick) 171.222. 18-24 — 1. Thomas O’Connell, Wichita,
Illinois State 0-0 1-1 Championship 38. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 170.832. 9:59. 25-34 — 1. Aaron Yoder, Lindsborg,
Missouri State 0-0 1-1 man). Rebounds —Pittsburg State 39 O — Hilliger 19 pass from Gimzo (Stamp
3-Point Goals—Utah 2-9 (M. Williams 1-2, kick) Nov. 24 at Welch Stadium, Emporia 39. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 170.762. 9:52. 35-39 — 1. Alex Granados, Fowler,
Wichita State 0-0 1-1 (7-Nolen, McGee), Avila 36 (Redmond 9). As- Hayward 1-2, Carroll 0-1, Foye 0-1, Millsap 0-1, Bishop Miege (7-5) vs. Bishop Carroll (12-0),
sists — Pittsburg State 14 (Porter 5), Avila 11 MV — Dukes 5 run (Miramontes kick) 40. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 170.665. 11:26. 40-44 — 1. Eric Zoller, 14:34. 45-49
Drake 0-0 0-1 Ma.Williams 0-2), Washington 5-16 (Price 2-2, 1 p.m. 41. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, Owner — 1. Brian Perrone, Hutchinson, 11:45.
Southern Illinois 0-0 0-1 (4-Johnson, Churchman). Fouls — Pittsburg MV — Reyes 2 run (Thornton run)
Crawford 1-3, Ariza 1-4, Martin 1-7). Fouled MV — Dukes 1 run (kick failed) Points. 50-59 — 1. Peter Kretsch, 10:45. 60-99 —
State 23, Avila 34. Out—None. Rebounds—Utah 67 (Jefferson Class 4A
Friday MV — Martinko 52 pass from Beasley (kick Friday’s Semifinals 42. (32) Ken Schrader, Ford, Owner Points. 1. Thom Wilkins, Conway Springs, 12:06. Fe-
Indiana 60, Indiana St. 46 13), Washington 49 (Okafor 14). Assists—U- blocked) 43. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 170.692. male 3-10 — 1. Lizzie Vetter, Andover, 15:38.
Eudora 21, KC Piper 7
Saturday Juco Men tah 18 (M. Williams 6), Washington 18 (Craw-
ford 8). Total Fouls—Utah 13, Washington 20.
O — Gimzo 3 run (Stamp kick) Holton 28, Mulvane 6 Failed to Qualify 11-14 — 1. Devyn Smith, 13:21. 15-17 — 1.
Evansville 74, San Jose St. 65 MV — O’Neal 18 run (Miramontes kick) Championship 44. (79) Reed Sorenson, Ford, 170.277. Katherine Trumble, 12:51. 18-24 — 1. Cassie
Northern Iowa 66, North Dakota St. 50 Hutchinson 84, Allen 67 Technicals—. Flagrant Fouls—Price. Individual statistics 45. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 170.057. Hollenback, Douglass, 12:29. 25-34 — 1.
A—16,210 (20,308). Nov. 24 at Salina Central
Southern Illinois, at Loyola-Chicago Allen – Buned 0, Roberts 13, Fountain 7, Rushing — Ottawa, Staats 14-56, Hayes Eudora (12-1) vs. Holton (13-0), 1 p.m. 46. (91) Jason Leffler, Toyota, 170.036. Natalie Neises, Wichita, 16:05. 35-39 — 1.
Sunday Schippers 13, Uno 8, Keiswetter 1, Barnette 11, Grizzlies 94, Bobcats 87 12-19, Gimzo 22-5, Adamson 1-(-30); Missouri 47. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 169.609. Dena Kelly, Wichita, 13:40. 40-44 — 1. Dee
UTSA at Wichita St., 1:05 p.m. Walden 0, Stockebrand 0, Tripplett 0, Rountree MEMPHIS (94)—Gay 7-16 1-1 16, Randolph Valley 15-105, Steward 15-67, O’Neal 7-46, Class 3A Points leaders: 1. Brad Keselowski, 2,371; Snyder, 15:55. 45-49 — 1. Katherine Hitz,
Illinois-Chicago at Drake, 2:05 p.m. 12, Walter 2. Totals 28-61 4-16 67.. Reyes 3-11.. Friday’s Semifinals 2. Jimmie Johnson, 2,351; 3. Kasey Kahne, 13:59. 50-59 — 1. Donna Spoonemore, Hills-
7-15 4-5 18, Gasol 3-7 6-6 12, Conley 7-12 5-6 boro, 14:22. 60-99 — 1. Trudy Calloway,
Hutchinson – Campbell 8, Grice 0, Davis Passing — Ottawa, Gimzo 19-34-178-4; Silver Lake 35, Rossville 14 2,321; 4. Clint Bowyer, 2,319; 5. Denny Hamlin,
Big 12 20, Allen 3-10 6-7 12, Pondexter 1-3 0-0 2,
Missouri Valley, Reyes 12-26-152-3, Beasley Scott City 42, Beloit 26 2,309; 6. Matt Kenseth, 2,297; 7. Greg Biffle, 15:41.
22, Watson 3, Pyle 0, Allen 14, Spencer 11, Speights 1-7 7-8 9, Bayless 2-5 1-1 5, Ellington
League Overall Whittingham 5, Jackson 2, Henley 12, Hunt 0, 2-4-71-0, Brinkley 1-1-35-0. Championship 2,293; 8. Kevin Harvick, 2,285; 9. Tony Stew-
West Virginia 0-0 3-0 0-5 0-0 0. Totals 31-80 30-34 94.
Nunn 7. Totals 31-70 19-30 84. CHARLOTTE (87)—Kidd-Gilchrist 3-4 6-10 Receiving — Ottawa, Hilliger 10-107, Ad- Nov. 24 at Gowans Stadium, Hutchin- art, 2,284; 10. Jeff Gordon, 2,281; 11. Martin
Kansas 0-0 2-0 Halftime score—Hutchinson 39, Allen 22. 3s amson 7-63, Wilkerson 2-8; Missouri Valley, son Truex Jr., 2,260; 12. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,211;
12, Mullens 7-21 2-3 18, Haywood 2-4 1-1 5,
12D THE WICHITA EAGLE ■ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 WWW.KANSAS.COM
Hermann Winter Whitcomb Jefferson Stamp Huelskamp Cherne Hullings Baxter Estes McAuliffe Lienhard
TOP 25
0-2 4-4 4, Youncofski 0-0 0-0 0, Nazarko 0-0 0-0 0,
Plunkett 0-0 0-0 0, Aaman 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 21-48
by crashing out of the season of mine.” ing unbeaten 8-8 58.
In fairness, Penske was out of Halftime–Ohio St. 30-26. 3-Point Goals–Ohio
finale. The disappointed team Bradley to a St. 8-19 (Smith, Jr. 3-4, Thomas 3-6, Craft 2-6,
owner then made his way to NASCAR from 1981 until 1991, 79-72 victory over IUPUI on Thompson 0-1, Ross 0-2), Rhode Island 8-17
(Malone 3-4, Munford 2-5, Powell 2-6, Malesevic
Chicago for the opening race of and Czarnecki said they discov- Saturday night. 1-2). Fouled Out–Malesevic. Rebounds–Ohio St.
NASCAR’s 10-race championship ered “the sport had clearly Jake Eastman chipped in David Welker/Associated Press 34 (Thomas 10), Rhode Island 24 (Malesevic 6).
Assists–Ohio St. 9 (Craft 4), Rhode Island 9
series, where Penske driver Brad changed” upon their return. And 17 points on 8-of-12 shooting San Diego State’s Deshawn (Powell 6). Total Fouls–Ohio St. 14, Rhode Island
Keselowski stole a surprise win Penske himself has admitted that for the Braves (3-0), who Stephens, left, James Rahon 13. Technical–Rhode Island Bench. A–NA.
over five-time champion Jimmie NASCAR wasn’t always a priority went on an 8-1 run with 2:51 block out Missouri State’s No. 17 MEMPHIS 65, SAMFORD
Johnson. to him. remaining to turn a 65-65 tie Gavin Thurman on Saturday 54
SAMFORD (1-3): Williams 7-11 7-10 21, Hood
It was a tremendous emotional “This hasn’t been our main into a 73-66 lead, then hit in Springfield, Mo. 1-6 2-2 5, Miller 3-6 1-2 9, Kelly 4-6 4-6 12, Cook
swing for Penske, who said to no Terry Renna/Associated Press focus. Many of the teams run- enough free throws in the 1-4 0-0 2, Hayman 0-0 0-0 0, Wilson 1-3 0-0 2,
Geffrard, Jr. 1-2 0-0 3, Wooten 0-0 0-0 0, Barnes
one in particular on that flight Brad Keselowski checks his ning in NASCAR haven’t had the final minute to secure the INDIANA ST. (2-1): Kitchell 3-7 2-4 8, Arop 3-8
1-1 7, Gant 3-8 3-4 9, Brown 0-1 0-0 0, Odum 5-6
0-1 0-0 0. Totals 18-39 14-20 54.
MEMPHIS (2-0): Hall 2-3 1-2 5, Thomas 6-12 4-4
home, “Well, we raced with the phone while in the garage responsibility of the IndyCar side, win. 6-6 17, Eitel 2-4 0-0 6, Cummings 2-5 0-0 5, R. 16, Black 2-4 0-0 4, Jackson 3-8 7-8 13, Crawford
big boys today. And we won.” before Saturday’s practice. too,” Penske said. “We’ve run the John Hart scored a career- Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Mahurin 4-9 2-3 12, K. Smith 2-5 2-6 2-2 6, Barton 4-9 2-2 14, Goodwin 1-2 0-0 2,
1-2 6. Totals 24-53 15-20 70. Stephens 2-2 1-2 5. Totals 22-46 17-20 65.
“That really struck me when Porsche cars and the long-dis- high 26 points, including Halftime–Indiana St. 34-26. 3-Point Goals–Tru- Halftime–Memphis 33-24. 3-Point Goals–Sam-
man St. 6-14 (Gardner 4-7, Carlson 1-1, Col. Myers
he said that, because Fontana reached out to Penske in 2008. tance racing. But I think our four 3-pointers, off the bench 1-2, Cor. Myers 0-1, Patterson 0-3), Indiana St. 7-19
ford 4-13 (Miller 2-3, Geffrard, Jr. 1-1, Hood 1-4,
Wilson 0-1, Kelly 0-2, Cook 0-2), Memphis 4-15
was the lowest of the lows, a He was driving for JR Motor- focus today, we’ve emerged as a for the Jaguars (2-2). (Eitel 2-4, Mahurin 2-4, K. Smith 1-2, Odum 1-2, (Barton 4-7, Jackson 0-1, Goodwin 0-1, Crawford
BRADLEY (3-0):Pickett 8-13 2-2 18, Egolf 2-7 0-0 Cummings 1-4, Arop 0-3). Fouled Out–Hicks. 0-2, Thomas 0-4). Fouled Out–Hood, Wilson.
tough night,” said Walt Czar- sports in the Nationwide Series competitor. We’ve been good in 4, Eastman 8-12 0-0 17, Lemon Jr. 4-11 9-10 19, Rebounds–Truman St. 26 (Jackson 7), Indiana St. Rebounds–Samford 25 (Williams 6), Memphis 24
necki, a Penske executive for and locked into a developmental the past, but we’ve never been Simms-Edwards 2-7 5-6 9, Bell 0-0 0-0 0, Crawford 35 (Gant, Mahurin 7). Assists–Truman St. 6 (Cor. (Stephens 7). Assists–Samford 9 (Kelly 5),
1-4 0-0 2, Shayok 0-0 0-0 0, Prosser 4-8 2-3 10. Myers 3), Indiana St. 11 (Odum 3). Total Foul- Memphis 12 (Crawford, Jackson 4). Total Fouls-
more than 40 years. “To come deal with Hendrick Motorsports, able to close the deal. Hopefully Totals 29-62 18-21 79. s–Truman St. 20, Indiana St. 15. A–NA. –Samford 17, Memphis 19. A–16,275.
back the next day and win Chica- but didn’t see a Cup ride opening that will be a different case this IUPUI (2-2): Gibbs 3-9 0-1 7, Patton 5-12 5-7 15, N. IOWA 72, NORTH DAKOTA 47 No. 20 Notre Dame 78, BYU 68
Rice 5-11 2-2 15, Esposito 3-9 2-2 9, Hart 9-15 4-5
go with Brad, it was such a turn- anytime soon. So he asked year.” 26, Gaines 0-1 0-0 0, Shanklin 0-3 0-0 0, Loepker NORTH DAKOTA (1-2): Anderson 4-13 3-4 12, BYU (2-2): Davies 4-11 4-7 12, Sharp 2-6 3-3 7,
Haws 8-20 5-6 21, Carlino 1-5 0-0 2, Zylstra 4-9 0-0
Antwi 3-11 0-2 9, Allard 1-3 0-0 2, Brekke 1-3 0-0 2,
ing point for Roger. He was Penske what he had available, It can be traced to Keselowski, 0-0 0-0 0, Barksdale 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 25-61 13-17
72. Schuler 2-5 1-2 6, Benton 0-0 0-0 0, Webb 2-8 0-0 10, Cusick 1-3 2-2 5, Ambrosino 0-1 0-0 0, Calvert
energized to race with the big even though Penske Racing who demands more of Penske’s 4, Wilmer 0-0 0-0 0, Archer 1-2 1-2 3, Traylor 3-7 0-0 0-0 0, Austin 2-5 0-0 4, Harward 2-3 3-4 7.
Halftime—IUPUI 34-30. 3-Point Goals—Brad- Totals 24-63 17-22 68.
ley 3-11 (Lemon Jr. 2-3, Eastman 1-2, Crawford 0-2, 3-4 9. Totals 17-52 8-14 47.
boys, and to beat them. And to wasn’t exactly the dream destina- time and energy simply by being Egolf 0-2, Simms-Edwards 0-2), IUPUI 9-21 (Hart N. IOWA (3-0): Mitchell 3-8 2-2 8, Bohannon 4-7 NOTRE DAME (3-1): Connaughton 1-5 2-4 5,
0-0 11, Tuttle 3-7 2-2 8, Koch 3-8 10-10 16, Sonnen Cooley 7-12 5-8 19, Atkins 5-10 3-4 16, Martin 2-4
do it after losing Fontana with tion for NASCAR talent. himself. He’s relentless in his 4-6, Rice 3-5, Gibbs 1-2, Esposito 1-6, Shanklin 0-1,
1-6 0-0 3, Rank 5-7 0-2 13, Singleton 0-1 1-2 1, 4-4 9, Grant 6-9 6-6 19, Biedscheid 2-5 2-2 6,
Barksdale 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds-
Will. It helped.” Penske has won 23 national passion and enthusiasm for —Bradley 42 (Pickett 10), IUPUI 33 (Gibbs 8). Buss 3-5 2-2 9, Morrison 0-2 0-0 0, Martino 1-2 0-0 Sherman 2-3 0-0 4. Totals 25-48 22-28 78.
3. Totals 23-53 17-20 72. Halftime—BYU 32-31. 3-Point Goals—BYU 3-14
Penske, the most successful championships and 15 Indianap- winning and wanting to turn Assists—Bradley 20 (Eastman 5), IUPUI 19
(Esposito, Rice 5). Total Fouls—Bradley 16, IUPUI Halftime–N. Iowa 36-25. 3-Point Goals–North (Zylstra 2-4, Cusick 1-2, Ambrosino 0-1, Sharp 0-1,
team owner in open-wheel histo- olis 500s, and his passion and his Penske Racing into an elite 18. A—1,085. Dakota 5-22 (Antwi 3-8, Schuler 1-4, Anderson 1-5,
Allard 0-1, Webb 0-4), N. Iowa 9-24 (Bohannon 3-5,
Haws 0-2, Carlino 0-4), Notre Dame 6-13 (Atkins
3-4, Martin 1-1, Grant 1-2, Connaughton 1-4,
ry, has little to show 40 years focus are usually directed on the NASCAR organization, and he No. 25 SAN DIEGO ST. 60, Rank 3-5, Martino 1-2, Sonnen 1-3, Buss 1-3, Koch Cooley 0-1, Biedscheid 0-1). Fouled Out—Harward.
0-3, Mitchell 0-3). Fouled Out–Brekke. Rebound- Rebounds—BYU 37 (Sharp 10), Notre Dame 34
after entering NASCAR. Keselow- open wheel part of the motor- presented Penske with a list of MISSOURI ST. 44 s–North Dakota 28 (Antwi, Traylor 4), N. Iowa 41 (Cooley 13). Assists—BYU 16 (Haws 4), Notre Dame
ski, the 28-year-old blue collar sports program. Although his things he and crew chief Paul SAN DIEGO ST. (2-1): O’Brien 3-7 0-2 6, (Tuttle 9). Assists–North Dakota 6 (Webb 2), N. 14 (Grant 5). Total Fouls—BYU 22, Notre Dame 16.
Stephens 1-4 0-0 2, Thames 3-12 5-5 11, J. Franklin Iowa 15 (Koch 4). Total Fouls–North Dakota 18, N. A—NA.
antiestablishment Michigan NASCAR organization had 61 Wolfe believed were needed for 6-14 9-11 22, Tapley 2-9 1-2 6, Spencer 0-1 0-2 0, Iowa 14. A–3,227.
S. ILLINOIS 100, BENEDICTINE
native, could change that for wins before Keselowski arrived, the team to be better. Polee II 1-5 1-2 3, Rahon 3-7 2-2 10. Totals 19-59
Detroit 85, Drake 79
18-26 60. SPRINGFILED 62
“The Captain” — just as he prom- it only contended for a champi- Keselowski, a constant texter MISSOURI ST. (1-1): Pickens 4-11 0-0 9, Wilson DRAKE (1-1):Clarke 6-7 4-10 17, Simons 4-13 1-2 BENEDICTINE SPRINGFILED (0-5): Michels 3-8
2-3 0-4 4, Kirk 1-5 2-2 4, Downing 5-14 5-6 16, 11, VanDeest 4-6 2-2 10, Ricks Jr. 2-3 0-0 6, Carter
ised in a passionate speech to onship once – in 1993 when and tweeter, keeps the Williams 3-6 0-0 8, Simpson 0-0 0-0 0, Carmichael 4-10 2-6 10, Babineaux 0-0 0-0 0, Hines 4-9 5-6 14,
0-0 6, Shepherd 2-4 2-3 6, Thomas 3-9 0-0 9, J.
Smith 5-12 0-2 11, Bewernick 3-8 1-2 9, D. Smith
Penske four years ago. Rusty Wallace won 10 races and 75-year-old Penske busy on his 0-0 0-0 0, Aromona 0-0 0-0 0, M. Marshall 0-6 1-2 Jeffers 1-3 0-0 3, Mason 0-0 0-0 0, King 2-4 4-4 8. 0-1 0-0 0, Whiteman 6-11 0-0 16, Dillard 2-4 1-2 5,
1, Thurman 0-4 0-2 0, Scheer 1-6 0-0 2, B. Marshall Totals 27-55 18-30 79.
Keselowski takes a 20-point still finished second to Dale phone. 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 16-57 8-16 44. DETROIT (2-1): Anderson 10-12 3-5 26,
Orji 0-0 0-0 0, Porter 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-57 4-9 62.
S. ILLINOIS (2-0): Bryer 4-8 0-0 8, Brown-Surles
lead over Johnson into Sunday’s Earnhardt. “To win a championship for Halftime–San Diego St. 29-20. 3-Point Goals- Minnerath 5-8 5-6 16, Howard Jr. 3-10 2-3 8, 1-5 3-4 6, Jackson 1-3 1-2 4, Lindsay 5-7 3-3 15,
–San Diego St. 4-22 (Rahon 2-5, Tapley 1-5, J. McCallum 5-9 9-11 20, Calliste 2-13 4-6 9, Boutte Early 9-12 1-1 19, Drinkard 2-4 0-1 4, Long 1-2 0-0
season finale at Homestead- “Roger Penske is an unbeliev- Roger would certainly be a huge Franklin 1-7, Polee II 0-2, Thames 0-3), Missouri St. 1-4 0-0 2, Njoku 0-2 0-0 0, Lippert 2-2 0-0 4, Wilson 3, Daniels 5-6 4-5 14, Swan 5-7 1-3 11, Beane, Jr.
Miami Speedway, where a finish able owner and person, and accomplishment considering 4-23 (Williams 2-3, Pickens 1-2, Downing 1-7, B. 0-0 0-0 0, Bruinsma 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 28-61 23-31 8-9 0-1 16. Totals 41-63 13-20 100.
Marshall 0-2, Thurman 0-2, Scheer 0-3, M. Marshall 85. Halftime–S. Illinois 42-30. 3-Point Goals–Bene-
of 15th or better will give Penske what’s surprising is he hasn’t everything he’s been through in 0-4). Fouled Out–None. Rebounds–San Diego Halftime—Detroit 42-35. 3-Point Goals—Drake dictine Springfiled 10-22 (Whiteman 4-6, Thomas
St. 52 (J. Franklin 12), Missouri St. 34 (Wilson 9). 7-18 (Ricks Jr. 2-3, Simons 2-5, Clarke 1-1, Hines
his first Sprint Cup title. It would won more championships, mul- American motorsports and be- Assists–San Diego St. 8 (Thames 5), Missouri St. 8 1-2, Jeffers 1-3, King 0-2, Carter 0-2), Detroit 6-20
3-5, Bewernick 2-5, J. Smith 1-3, Michels 0-1,
Dillard 0-1, D. Smith 0-1), S. Illinois 5-12 (Lindsay
have been his first ever NASCAR tiple championships,” NASCAR yond,” Keselowski said. “You (M. Marshall 3). Total Fouls–San Diego St. 15, (Anderson 3-3, Minnerath 1-3, McCallum 1-3, 2-3, Long 1-1, Jackson 1-2, Brown-Surles 1-3, Swan
Missouri St. 25. Technical–J. Franklin. A–7,272. Calliste 1-7, Bruinsma 0-1, Boutte 0-1, Howard Jr. 0-1, Beane, Jr. 0-1, Early 0-1). Fouled Out–None.
championship if Keselowski chairman Brian France said look at his legacy in the sport 0-2). Fouled Out—Anderson, Minnerath. Rebounds–Benedictine Springfiled 26 (Bewernick
hadn’t won him a second-tier Saturday. and you can’t help but feel that INDIANA ST. 70, TRUMAN ST. 57 Rebounds—Drake 34 (Clarke 10), Detroit 37 6), S. Illinois 35 (Early, Lindsay 7). Assists–Bene-
TRUMAN ST. (0-2): Jackson 3-11 1-2 7, Carlson (Anderson 10). Assists—Drake 10 (Carter 4), dictine Springfiled 12 (Shepherd 3), S. Illinois 22
Nationwide title in 2010 – his Rick Hendrick, winner of 10 he’s been a little bit slighted on 4-6 1-2 10, Col. Myers 1-5 0-0 3, Cor. Myers 1-3 Detroit 15 (McCallum 5). Total Fouls—Drake 26, (Beane, Jr., Brown-Surles, Lindsay 4). Total
8-10 10, Anderson 2-2 2-2 6, Hicks 0-2 0-0 0, Detroit 22. A—2,047.
first season with Penske Racing. Cup titles and owner of John- the NASCAR side. We’d like to Gardner 5-8 1-1 15, Patterson 0-3 0-2 0, Kacich 0-0
Fouls–Benedictine Springfiled 18, S. Illinois 11.
Technicals–Benedictine Springfiled Bench, Early.
These are the trophies Kese- son’s car, echoed the sentiment get that job done, and I think we 0-0 0, Bush 2-5 0-0 4, Burmester 1-1 0-0 2. Totals A–3,107.
lowski vowed to deliver when he and almost sounded as if he’s have the opportunity to do it.” 19-46 13-19 57. Top 25
■■■
From Page 1D
Frankamp can’t wait to get to KU.
Sorry to disappoint. He signed his letter of intent
Frankamp barely stands out from Wednesday and says playing for the
the crowd inside his diverse high Jayhawks will be a dream come
school, North, where kids from ma- true. He committed to Kansas a year
ny different backgrounds and cul- and a half ago without much fan-
tures know him simply as “Conner.” fare.
He relishes their adulation, but he His star has risen since, thanks to
doesn’t flaunt it. He works hard in an incredible junior season for North
school, likes to please his parents and a summer during which he
and takes out the trash because it’s helped the U.S. win the FIBA U17
on his list of chores. world championship in Kaunas,
Frankamp is signed, sealed and Lithuania.
delivered to play basketball at Kan- Frankamp moved from a three-star
sas, but he reminds himself con- to a four-star recruit. The buzz that
stantly that those days are in the once accompanied Frankamp has
future. What’s at hand now is his become a buzzer. He’s hot but he
senior year at North, where he will doesn’t know it. Or at least doesn’t
help bring down the oldest gymnasi- acknowledge it.
um in the City League while raising, Fernando Salazar/The Wichita Eagle “He doesn’t bring any individual
he hopes, a City League champi- Connor Frankamp plays ping pong with his brother Kevin in a garage behind their house near Andover. attention to him at all,” Squires said.
onship banner to put in the new gym “He’s a very confident young man
that opens next year. and he knows what it takes to get
“If you didn’t know who Conner is also Gary Squires’ top assistant at
“I think this year if I score 25 she remembers Conner. “Oh my the job done. But he doesn’t make
was here, you’d never be able to pick points per game, we’ll be good toNorth, so an investment in the Red- goodness, yes. I remember after my waves about it.”
him out of a crowd at North,” athlet- skins is mutual in the Frankamp
go,” Frankamp said. “That’s going to first sessions with him that I called Frankamp is quiet, but not shy.
ic director Brian Becker said. “He family.
be our best chance to be successful.” my dad and said, ‘Remember this He’s sure of himself, but not boast-
just wants to be a kid, to be a high Kevin finished high school at name, he’ll play anywhere he wants ful. Things come easy for him, it
school student.” ■■■ North after starting at Trinity Acade- to as long as he keeps working hard appears. Yet he has worked for years
my and North is where Conner feels and stays healthy.’ ” to refine his skills.
■■■ Anybody who hangs out in a YM- comfortable, even though his older Stiles, in her first season as an His father makes sure Frankamp
CA gym in Wichita has seen Fran- teammates at times tried to freeze assistant coach at Loyola Mary- gets the most out of his athletic
Frankamp is a 6-foot guard who kamp’s devotion and work ethic up him out during his freshman season, mount in Los Angeles, saw her ca- abilities. His mother has other re-
looks like a lot of other 6-foot guards close. when Frankamp broke onto the big reer end because of injuries she sponsibilities.
until he gets that basketball in his His regimen is to make somewhere stage. suspects occurred because of all the “My job is to make sure he stays
hands. That’s when the magic show from 300 to 500 shots a day, and to “I got used to being pushed hours she devoted to basketball grounded in reality,” Karen Fran-
starts. work on his ballhandling until his around by those guys and it made when she was growing up. You kamp said. “I want him to realize he
He shoots, he dribbles, he passes. hands are sore. He doesn’t cut cor- me tougher,” Frankamp said. couldn’t lock her out of the gym. has a gift, but that he also has other
He gets his shot before a defender ners. He never wakes up and con- He appreciates North’s history and It’s the same way with Frankamp, duties.”
can raise his arms and it really vinces himself he’s too tired. knows Lynette Woodard and Barry who is aware of potential wear and Like taking out the trash, unload-
doesn’t matter whether he’s shooting “Conner was obsessed with basket- Sanders were Redskins and that’s tear. ing the dishwasher, folding his
a lay-up or a three-pointer, it’s prob- ball from a very early age,” said his meaningful to him. “We try to keep a handle on it,” he clothes, cleaning his room.
ably going in. mother, Karen, a kindergarten teach- “There are so many different types said. “I try to take a couple of days Cleaning his room? A teenage
“At North, Conner has had to do so er at Bostic Elementary in Wichita. of people at North, which is a good off here and there, just to let my boy?
much,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “Even when he was a toddler, he thing,” Frankamp said. “I feel like body recover. But working with “OK, he’s not that good,” Karen
“He’s scoring, handling the ball. But would make anybody he could be- I’ve connected with a lot of them. I Jackie was a great experience. I said.
the great thing about him from his come a basketball goal so he could try to be friendly to everyone and I learned from her work ethic.” Frankamp admits to having flights
time playing in the summer campus shoot baskets into their arms. We try not to have any enemies.” Stiles saw a part of herself in Fran- of fancy about KU, where he’ll play
and Junior Olympics is that he’s spent a lot of hours at his grandpar- kamp, which is partly why their in another historic barn. How could
shown he can really play with other ents’ house, watching him and pre- ■■■ sessions together were so enjoyable. he not?
good players. I think a lot of those tending to be the announcer as he “You just don’t see that kind of “I try to stay in the moment,” he
guys look at him and say, ‘Who is pretended to be Michael Jordan. First and foremost, Frankamp is a passion in kids,” she said. “He was said. “But there are times that I’ll get
this guy?’ ” Hours and hours.” shooter. There isn’t a shot he can’t just the whole package — very, very carried away by thinking about what
Even with the gaudy scoring num- Frankamp never played football make, nor one he isn’t willing to special. I feel honored that I had a is ahead. It’s so crazy up there in
bers, though, North is only 35-31 in and shunned baseball — which he take. He’ll often pull up 10 feet or so chance to work with. I grew up as a Lawrence; the atmosphere in so
Frankamp’s three seasons. He’s been says is boring — after only a couple of above the top of the key and launch huge KU fan and I remember watch- crazy.’’
filling it up, all right, but too many practices as a kid. He does enjoy a shot that makes you think he’s not ing Danny and the Miracles with my But Frankamp is adamant that he’s
times has gone home disappointed playing golf and relishes the knock- thinking straight only to watch it dad. Now I absolutely cannot wait out to help North do something
from losses. down, drag-out games of ping-pong ripple the net. until Conner gets there so that I’ll special first, and that his KU experi-
So he’s not thinking about 35 he plays with his brother, Kevin, Frankamp never gets tired of have that KU connection again.” ence will be dulled some if the Red-
points a game or breaking records who is 24. They play nearly every shooting. He doesn’t take his ability It had to be asked. How would a skins don’t have a special season.
this season. He’s thinking about night in the big garage behind their to make shots for granted, which is game of H-O-R-S-E between Stiles His senior season begins soon. The
winning. house near Andover, where Fran- why he pushes himself every day. and Frankamp end? most dynamic player the City
“I feel like we have a good team kamp could have gone to high He is a lot like former Claflin High Stiles, no doubt Frankamp’s equal League has seen in years will have
with more experience,” Frankamp school. and Missouri State standout Jackie as a competitor, needed a moment come and gone in the blink of an
said. “Everybody is stronger. Every- But Frankamp’s father, Marty, is a Stiles in that way. So imagine the to answer. eye. Then Frankamp will be on to
body got a lot of game experience physical education teacher at Pleas- energy created a few years back “Well, we never played before,” bigger and better things, ready to
last year.” ant Valley Middle School, near 29th when Frankamp worked with Stiles she said. “I really wish I had been take flight but never losing sight of
Then he dropped the bombshell, and Amidon. His brother and sister regularly in Wichita to improve his working with him in my prime, be- the ground.
saying that for North to reach its were North graduates and Marty skills. fore all the injuries. OK, so even
team goals he has to score less. would have gone to North had his “Do I remember Conner?” Stiles though I hate to lose more than Reach Bob Lutz at blutz@wichitaeagle.com
Less. family not moved to Goddard. Marty asked incredulously when asked if anything — I absolutely hate to lose — or 316-268-6597.
TALK TO US: Call Michael Pearce,
316-268-6382, or e-mail
mpearce@wichitaeagle.com
south Texas and neigh- pants remember, were amazing. Kent Peterson, left, and his son, Chris, wait for prairie chickens on Saturday at the Sundgren ranch near
boring areas can be too Cassoday. Friends have gathered annually for more than 50 years.
exhausting for some to sur- The glory years
vive. Along the way they
encounter predators in- “It was something, to see flocks of
cluding coyotes, eagles and 200 birds, and it wasn’t just one
human hunters. flock but several,” said Jim Kerlin,
Birds resting at the Quivi- who has made the trip most of the
ra National Wildlife Refuge 50-plus years from Tulsa, “and that
were caught in last week- doesn’t include all of the other
end’s barrage of high winds flocks.”
and sizable hail. An avid Back then seasons as short as two
birder estimated there were days saw hunters from many states
about 25 sandhills dead or come to the Flint Hills.
dying the next day from the Hard-working ranchers took a few
pounding. days to entertain family and friends.
Sandhill cranes have also Civic groups in tiny towns now all
been killed by flying into but gone held pancake feeds and
power lines near feeding ferried hunters to fields to raise
fields. funds for local causes.
Probably no hunting spot was
more coveted than the Sundgren
Ranch, a few miles south of Casso-
day, the self-proclaimed “Prairie
Chicken Capital of the World.” Hunters gather to talk with rancher Steve Sundgren after hunting prairie chickens Saturday morning. The
Kerlin remembers gunning with 70 Sundgren family has hosted annual opening day prairie chicken hunts on their Butler County ranch for more
SOLUNAR TABLE guests, including professional ath-
letes, governors, U.S. representa-
than 50 years.
This table lists top fishing tives, television personalities and A recent study by Kansas State dy didn’t shoot at least one bird.
times and days for the com- multi-millionaires. University and the Kansas Depart- He wasn’t too disappointed.
ing week. For best results, For decades, the opener at the Sund- ment of Wildlife and Parks showed
begin fishing one hour be- gren’s was as much an event as a hunt. populations have decreased up to 30 More than just hunting
fore and continue one hour Many hunters arrived on Friday and percent per year in many parts of the
after the times given. Times went afield mornings and afternoons on Flint Hills. Populations have shown “I enjoy the hunt, but I really enjoy
apply to all time zones (bold Saturday and Sunday. moderate rebounds when pastures the people as much,” he said. “They
indicates best days). What happened between the hunts aren’t burned, like after years of come from all over, we become
was about as important as the great drought. friends and a lot of times this is the
Sunday 4:35 p.m. 5:05 a.m. hunting. Since the same studies showed only chance we get to see each oth-
Monday 5:35 p.m. 6:00 a.m. “When it was two days and really hunting usually accounts for less er.”
Tuesday 6:20 p.m. 6:40 a.m. big, Jacque would start cooking two than one percent of prairie chicken Kerlin agrees. Even though fading
Wed. 7:05 p.m. 7:30 a.m. to three weeks in advance,” Sund- mortalities, Sundgren has continued eyesight kept him from heading
Thursday 7:50 p.m. 8:15 a.m.
gren said of his wife. Visiting hunt- the event. afield, he said he wouldn’t have
ers often cooked things like catfish “Hunting’s not the problem, not at missed the time around the Sund-
Friday 8:35 p.m. 9:00 a.m. and assorted wild game for the all,” said Sundgren, who manages gren ranchstead.
Saturday 9:20 p.m. 9:40 a.m. crowd. his grasslands for the optimal bene- “A lot of these guys are like an
Next Sun. 10:05 p.m. 10:30 a.m. Last year the hunt was shortened fit of greater prairie chickens and his extended family,” he said. “When I
Source: U.S. Naval Observatory data to one day because of declining cattle herd. “They’re my favorite first came Steve was nine. I’ve
hunter numbers and declining num- bird. They’re tough … they just need watched him grow up, his kids grow
bers of prairie chickens. habitat and they’ll survive.” Drake Stoudenmyer, of Bucyrus, up and now I’m watching his grand-
SCHEDULES Still, Saturday will be the only day was the only hunter to shoot a kids grow up. It’s all been a lot of
Birding/Nature
Tuesday — “Uganda and Gorillas,” Jim Marlett,
Habitat issues prairie chicken hunting is allowed prairie chicken Saturday morning fun.”
Wichita Audubon Society, Great Plains Nature Cen- on the 7,000 acres he owns or man- on an annual hunt that’s spanned After the morning’s hunt most
ter, 7 p.m.
Dec. 8 — Night Hike, Chaplain Nature Center,
Mark Kennedy left his home near ages. more than 50 years. Prairie chicken gathered in a huge metal shed to eat
Arkansas City, 7-8 p.m., call 620-442-4133. Kansas City at 3 a.m. to be at Satur- numbers appear to be up this year biscuits and gravy brought by a
Fishing
Through April 15 — Trout season. day’s hunt. He’s been coming for This year’s hunt in the Flint Hills, though few birds guest for breakfast. The Sundgrens
General about 25 years, and his father was flew Saturday morning. were serving sloppy Joes for lunch
Jan. 10 — Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism
Commission meeting, Butler County Community an annual guest about 20 years When drought prevented many and lasagna for dinner after an after-
College, Clifford/Stone Community Center, El Do-
rado.
before that. ranchers from burning last spring, need to come to grain,” he said as he noon hunt.
Hunting “I remember several years when Sundgren hoped the birds would waited by a hay bale Saturday morn- Games of pitch were expected,
Below is the basic listing of hunting seasons.
Please check regulations for boundary, limits and we had the flocks of 100 or more respond with good nesting success. ing. “They can stay out on the prai- when hunters would swap stories
permit requirements at www.kdwp.state.ks.us. birds,” said Kennedy, “now if we see He thinks they did. rie and feed. Most of our really good about past practical jokes at the
.
Year-around — Rabbit season. one of 30 to 50, you’re like ‘wow.’ “I saw good broods when I was hunts have come after we’ve had a hunt, and times when guests shot
Through Nov. 27 — Fall turkey season. (first
segment)
The populations dropped dramat- working cattle or cutting hay,” he big killing freeze that’s killed off the more than 100 birds in a morning.
Through Dec. 2 — Low plains early zone duck ically, so quickly.” said. “It wasn’t like it used to be, but insects.” “… and we didn’t put a dent in the
season. (first segment). Sundgren said it was about 20 it was good to see.” About 40 prairie chickens flew into population,” Sundgren said of the
ThroughDec. 30 — Low plains late zone duck
season (first segment). years ago that range experts began Sundgren said increased numbers the fields Saturday morning, most great flocks from about 1955-1995.
Through Dec. 30 — White-fronted goose sea-
son (first segment). urging annual burning and heavily of meadowlarks were also a good between the well-spaced hunters. But he worries declining prairie
Through Dec. 31 — Archery deer season. grazing pastures when new grass sign, since they’re also a ground- Young Drake Stoudenmyer, of chicken and hunter numbers may
Through Jan. 3 — Sandhill crane season.
Through Jan. 31 — Pheasant and quail season. popped to the surface. nesting species impacted by burning Bucyrus, was the only hunter to take mean the event has run its course.
Through Feb. 10 — Canada goose season “It didn’t take long after that, it and heavy grazing. a bird on the morning hunt. In the “Jackie and I wonder if (numbers)
(second segment).
Through Feb. 10 — Light goose season (sec- happened so quickly,” Sundgren said But more prairie chickens on the afternoon, hunters shot three more don’t get better if this might be our
ond segment).
Through Feb. 28 — Squirrel season. of the decline in prairie chickens. prairie and more prairie chickens birds. Sundgren is confident colder last year,” Sundgren said as he left
Through Jan. 3 — Sandhill crane season. “Now they burn for miles and miles, flying over hunters waiting by grain weather will bring bigger flocks of the field Saturday morning. “But
Through Feb. 10 — Canada goose season
(second segment). and there’s nothing left for nesting . fields are two different things. birds. that would mean I wouldn’t get to
Through Feb. 10 — Light goose season (sec-
ond segment).
nothing.” “It’s been so warm they have no It was only the second time Kenne- see a lot of our good friends.”