going strong
Transcription
going strong
LEADING GOING STRONG Halie Dampf has grown as a leader at Russellville High School and now helps others. At 95 years young, Alberta Rich lives on her own, cooks and drives. ■ LOCAL B1 ■ ACTIVE TIMES J E F F E R S ON CI T Y, M I S S O URI MONDAY 50¢ JANUARY 4, 2016 WWW.NEWSTRIBUNE.COM VOL. 150, NO. 259 “We’re going to be willing to tackle anything that we think could improve that environment and create the kind of Legislature that the public expects and they should be entitled to.” Missouri tries again on ethics By Summer Ballentine Associated Press Gerry Tritiz/News Tribune At left, Autumn Wood, Eldon, gets a sample of Lutz’s Famous BBQ from Lauren Lutz, daughter of owner Burl Lutz, also serving in the background. Lutz’s was one of about 80 vendors at Sunday’s 2016 Bridal Spectacular at the Firley YMCA. Below, live models Samantha Tracy and Sarah Sullentrop chat with Crystal Glaze and Ashley Forck while modeling for Kay’s Bridal and Tuxedo in Sedalia. Glaze accompanied Forck, who is planning an April 16 wedding. Here come the brides Bridal Spectacular sparkles with ideas for future nuptials By Gerry Tritz gtritz@newstribune.com Ashley Forck, a bride-to-be, came with friend Crystal Glaze to the annual Bridal Spectacular, hoping to get some ideas for honeymoon locations after her April 16 wedding. But she got sidetracked, talking to a pair of live models at the booth for Kay’s Bridal and Tuxedo, based in Sedalia. She and Glaze also stopped to get their photos taken at a photo booth. With some 80 vendors, it was easy for the estimated 300 future brides — plus moms, friends and occasional fiancés — to get sidetracked. The 29th annual event was held Sunday at the Firley YMCA and featured a half dozen photographers, half dozen DJs, and many other wedding-related services. Attendees also entered giveaways — including a honeymoon package to the Dominican Republic — munched on food samples, and got to watch a dress modeling show at the end. Each vendor had a prize they were giving Please see Brides, p. 3 Missouri lawmakers in 2016 will again try to rein in state ethics laws that are some of the loosest in the nation, this year against a backdrop of allegations of inappropriate actions toward interns by former legislators that some say added to public mistrust of the Legislature. While legislators most years push for stricter policies with little success, supporters say the shadow lingering over the Capitol after the resignation of two lawmakers in 2015 could mean proposals finally become law in the session beginning Wednesday. “The issues involving ethics reform are teed up for this legislative session,” Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon said. “You’ve got folks talking about these, putting bills in, in the most constructive way that I’ve seen in seven years.” Missouri is the only state with loose laws in three areas often described as “ethics” rules: no restrictions on contributions to political candidates, no ban on lawmakers immediately becoming lobbyists after leaving public office and no limits on lobbyist-bought gifts and meals for elected officials. More than a dozen pre-filed bills would change that. Several would clamp down on the revolving legislature-lobbyist door and money in politics, as well as impose more reporting requirements and ban lawmakers from smoking and drinking in the Capitol in most circumstances. One proposal would require lawmakers to close out their campaign coffers before becoming lobbyists. Measures to cap campaign contributions appear less likely to pass than other measures. “Clearly you’d like to have something done in the campaign-finance arena,” Nixon said, adding that he hopes discussions on other ethics matters will spark conversations about capping donations. Majority Floor Leader Mike Kehoe, R-Jefferson City, said such a proposal would be “tough” to pass during an election year. GOP House Speaker Todd Richardson and Kehoe said the strategy is to focus on passing single-issue bills rather than an all-encompassing ethics package. The idea is that if there’s disagreement about one proposal, others with more support could still move forward and would have a better chance of becoming law. Both tactics — many smaller bills or a single measure that addresses multiple aspects of ethics policy — have failed repeatedly to pass in Missouri. Measures to ban lobbyist gifts and close the revolving door span back to at least 2005. The Legislature in 2008 repealed campaign contribution limits. Lawmakers’ attempts to change ethics policy this past year centered on a single proposal that failed in the last days of the session when the House fell into disarray following claims that former Republican Speaker John Diehl exchanged sexual text messages with a Capitol intern. Diehl, R-Town and Country, Please see Ethics, p. 3 Oregon standoff latest in dispute over Western lands BURNS, Ore. (AP) — The remote high desert of eastern Oregon became the latest flashpoint for anti-government sentiment as armed protesters occupied a national wildlife refuge to object to a prison sentence for local ranchers for burning federal land. Ammon Bundy — the son of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, who was involved in a 2014 standoff with the government over grazing rights — is among the people at the headquarters of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. It was unclear exactly how many people were taking part in the protests. Ammon Bundy posted a video on his Facebook page asking for militia members to come help him. He said “this is not a time to stand down. It’s a time to stand up and come to Harney County,” where Burns is located. Bundy and other militia members came to Burns last month, a small town about 280 miles southeast of Portland, Oregon. They were upset over the loom- ■ INSIDE ■ OUTSIDE News Tribune online Check for breaking news, submit your news ideas and join the discussions about today's stories at: www.newstribune.com Protesters march on Court Avenue in support of an Oregon ranching family facing jail time for arson in Burns, Ore., on Saturday. Family members were convicted of the arsons three years ago and served time. But a judge ruled their terms were too short under federal law and ordered them back to prison for about four years each. ing prison sentences for local ranchers Dwight and Steven Hammond. They went to the wildlife refuge Saturday evening following a peaceful rally in Burns to support the ranchers. Dwight Hammond, 73, and Steven Hammond, 46, said they lit the fires on federal land in 2001 and 2006 to reduce the growth of invasive plants and protect their property from wildfires. The two were convicted of the arsons three years ago and served time — the father three months, the son one year. But a federal judge ruled in October that their terms were too short under U.S. minimum sentencing law and ordered them back to prison for about four years each. The decision generated controversy and is part of a decades-long dispute between some Westerners and the federal government over the use of public lands. The issue traces back to the 1970s and the “Sagebrush Rebellion,” a move by Western states like Please see Standoff, p. 3 Clear and cold today Today’s high: Today’s low: © Copyright 2016 News Tribune Co. 33 23 ■ SPORTS Business ..................A4 Calendar..................B1 Classifieds ........... D1-3 Comics ................... D4 Crossword............... D4 Dear Abby............... D3 Faces .......................B2 Opinion....................B3 People .....................A2 Sports .....................C1 Statistics .................C2 TV Schedule............ D4 Weather ...................A2 Chiefs still on roll The Kansas City Chiefs win their 10th straight game, knocking off the Oakland Raiders, 23-17. But Denver keeps them from the division title. ■ PAGE C1 www.newstribune.com ■ WATERCOOLER Man who took Snapchat selfie with robbery victim arrested Police in Northern California say they have arrested a man accused of armed robbery thanks to a Snapchat selfie he took with one of the victims. Pacific Grove police arrested 18-year-old Victor Almanza-Martinez, of Castroville, and that they continue to search for two other suspects believed to have participated in an armed robbery. Police say that Almanza-Martinez and the two others approached four victims Wednesday at Lover Point Park and allegedly robbed them of their belongings, including a car. The suspects fled in the stolen car, which is still missing, but before leaving Almanza-Martinez and a female victim exchanged Snapchat information and posed for a selfie together. A2 NEWSTICKER NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 From The Associated Press MISSOURI 5 Today's Forecast -DAY City/Region High | Low temps Forecast for Monday, Jan. 4 Forecast highs for Monday, Jan. 4 Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy IOWA Temperature FORECAST Kirksville 29° | 18° Sunday High: 47; low: 27 ILL. Record high for today’s date: 73 degrees in 1997. Columbia 32° | 22° Kansas City 30° | 19° Jefferson City 33° | 23° Record low for today’s date: -10 degrees in 1959. St. Louis 31° | 23° KAN. TUESDAY River, lake stages 41˚/26˚ Springfield 40° | 20° OKLA. Partly Cloudy Thunderstorms TENN. Cold Warm Stationary Pressure Low High Snow Weather Underground • AP JEFFERSONCITYAREA 46˚/40˚ Fronts Ice Flurries 44˚/35˚ THURSDAY 12.89 12.43 12.83 18.20 658.79 © 2016 Wunderground.com Rain Showers Kansas City Boonville Jefferson City Hermann Lake of the Ozarks Cape Girardeau 33° | 25° ARK. Cloudy WEDNESDAY ALMANAC National forecast Skies will be mostly cloudy this morning and early afternoon then becoming partly cloudy. Highs will be in the lower 30s with light wind. Tonight should remain partly cloudy with a low around 20. Tuesday will bring partly cloudy skies with a high in the lower 40s and south wind around 10 mph. Tuesday night will be partly cloudy with a low in the mid-20s. Wednesday will be mostly cloudy with a chance of afternoon rain. -10s -0s Showers 0s 10s Rain 20s 30s 40s T-storms 50s 60s 70s Flurries 80s 90s 100s 110s Snow Ice Wet Weather Possible Out West A few snow showers will continue to be possible around the Great Lakes, and even in parts of the Ohio Valley. An upper level trough of low pressure will bring a chance of showers to much of the West, with snow possible, especially at higher elevations. Weather Underground • AP Precipitation For the previous day, the National Weather Service reported: Sunday: 0.00 The record on this date: 0.97 inches in 1993. Month: 0.00 Normal for month: 0.26 Year: 0.00 Normal for year: 0.26 Sun Sunset today 5:01 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow 7:27 a.m. NATIONWIDE FRIDAY 50˚/35˚ SATURDAY 41˚/27˚ Albany,N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo Burlington,Vt. Casper Charleston,S.C. Charleston,W.Va. Charlotte,N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia,S.C. Columbus,Ohio Hi 41 41 52 38 48 53 52 61 52 27 50 25 28 44 51 35 35 37 57 47 53 42 29 37 34 53 33 HOW MAY WE HELP The News Tribune is committed to providing fair and accurate coverage of the news. Readers who have concerns or comments are encouraged to call 573-636-3131. Please, let us know if you have a story idea. Contact Us Switchboard: 573-636-3131 FAX: 573-636-7035 General e-mail: NT@newstribune.com SUBSCRIBER SERVICES 6 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday 6:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Saturday 6:30 a.m.-noon Sunday 636-3132 or 1-866-332-8965 PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER Terri Leifeste 761-0237 terril@newstribune.com CIRCULATION/DISTRIBUTION Michael Johns 761-0261 circ@newstribune.com ADVERTISING Jane Haslag 761-0270 jane@newstribune.com Lo 27 20 23 34 29 35 24 42 26 17 31 03 12 31 42 31 32 19 41 33 28 13 22 29 29 32 28 Prc Otlk PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Snow .17 Clr Snow PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy .09PCldy MMSnow .02 Clr Cldy Clr Snow Clr Cldy Snow Cldy .02Snow Clr Cldy Concord,N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro,N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson,Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles 40 60 35 46 27 36 27 50 43 23 27 45 34 32 54 43 11 80 62 34 55 54 34 34 80 56 55 62 29 38 28 15 19 32 21 27 28 04 16 19 31 10 27 28 B06 63 43 25 39 48 32 22 73 42 34 44 PCldy Clr Snow Cldy Cldy Cldy MM Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Snow Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Clr .07 Clr Cldy Clr .24 Clr .04PCldy Cldy .49 Cldy Cldy Clr Rain Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk,Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland,Maine Portland,Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis 46 51 55 79 54 29 29 55 55 45 50 45 47 22 59 19 50 72 33 40 32 46 53 32 35 54 57 39 33 21 31 68 30 24 24 29 48 35 35 10 24 13 57 15 30 53 30 31 28 27 31 13 25 28 38 30 Snow Cldy Clr .99PCldy Clr Snow Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy .10 Clr .01 Cldy Snow Rain Snow PCldy .08 Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain Cldy St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan,P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Seattle Shreveport Sioux Falls Spokane Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington,D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington,Del. 62 27 62 63 53 84 45 21 40 60 22 20 38 61 42 70 47 54 45 38 51 59 19 40 49 44 71 17 18 35 43 06 07 27 57 24 49 25 32 26 25 24 .09 Clr Cldy .34 Clr Rain Rain PCldy Cldy .03PCldy .02Snow Clr Cldy .03 Cldy .11 Cldy .13 Clr Cldy Rain Clr Snow PCldy PCldy Snow National Temperature Extremes High Sunday 82 at Pembroke Pines, Fla. Low Sunday 20 Below Zero at Gunnison County, Colo. m — indicates missing information. _____ BOSTON (AP) — A federal judge has denied a motion by Bill Cosby’s wife to throw out a subpoena requiring her to give a deposition in a lawsuit brought by seven women who accuse the comedian of sexually assaulting them decades ago. The ruling issued Thursday by U.S. Judge Magistrate David Hennessey in Springfield, Massachusetts, means Camille Cosby is scheduled to be deposed by lawyers for the women on Wednesday. In his 12-page decision, Hennessey said Camille Cosby failed to prove that she and her husband were protected by the state’s marital disqualification law. He also rejected NATION RANCHING STANDOFF: A family known for a government showdown over access to federal land joins with other self-described militia members in occupying a building at a national wildlife refuge, protesting the pending imprisonment of two Oregon ranchers. CAMPAIGN 2016: It’s already been a year of town halls, weekend forums and lunchtime meet-and-greets for those who would be president, not to mention nights spent sparring in televised debates and endless days fundraising. All aimed at people who only now are starting to think about their vote for the White House, with their first say coming Feb. 1 in Iowa. OBAMA: Vacation over, President Barack Obama says he’s energized for his final year in office, turning immediate attention to the issue of gun violence and set to discuss options Monday with his attorney general. MEAT LABELING: After more than a decade of wrangling, Congress repeals a labeling law that requires retailers to include the animal’s country of origin on packages of red meat, handing a major victory to the meat industry. WORLD CELEBRITYNEWS LONDON (AP) — Prince William has said that being a father has made him “more emotional” and more prone to welling up. The royal is the father of two children, 2-year-old Prince George and Princess Charlotte, born in May. In a television interview, the 33-year-old said that becoming a parent has made him more aware of “how precious life is.” William said that he “never used to get too wound up or worried about things,” but now feels more affected by world events. “Now the smallest little things, you well up a little more, you get affected by the sort of things that happen around the world or whatever a lot more, I think, as a father,” he said. LEGISLATURE-ETHICS: Missouri legislative leaders say it’s time to clamp down on state ethic laws after two lawmakers, including the former House speaker, resigned in 2015 in face of allegations of inappropriate behavior toward interns. Lawmakers during the session beginning in January will push dozens of policy changes ranging from prohibiting lobbyist gifts to lawmakers to banning lawmakers from becoming lobbyists as soon as they leave elected office. MIDWEST FLOODING: The Mississippi River and many of its tributaries continued their retreat Sunday from historic and deadly winter flooding, leaving amid the silt a massive cleanup and recovery effort likely to take weeks if not months. The flood, fueled by more than 10 inches of rain over a three-day period that began Christmas Day, is blamed for 25 deaths in Illinois and Missouri, reflecting Sunday’s discovery of the body of a second teenager who drowned in central Illinois’ Christian County. claims that the value of the testimony would be outweighed by the “undue burden” it would cause. _____ LOS ANGELES (AP) — The legendary cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, best known for “The Deer Hunter” and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” has died. His business partner Yuri Neyman confirmed that Zsigmond died on Friday in Big Sur, California. He was 85. The Hungarian-born Zsigmond helped define cinema’s American New Wave in the 1970s through iconic collaborations and a preference for natural light. He first gained renown for his collaboration with Robert Altman on classics “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” and “The Long Goodbye.” In addition to his work on Michael Cimino’s classic “The Deer Hunter,” for which he earned an Oscar nomination, Zsigmond also worked with Brian De Palma on a number of films including “Blow Out.” Zsigmond’s sole Oscar win was for Steven Spielberg’s “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.” _____ Today’s birthdays: Actor Dabney Coleman is 84. Singer Stephen Stills is 71. Actor Mel Gibson is 60. Actress Danica McKellar (“The Wonder Years”) is 41. Actor Nicholas Gonzalez (“The O.C.”) is 40. Singer and former “American Idol” contestant Kimberley Locke is 38. SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Arabia is severing diplomatic relations with Shiite powerhouse Iran amid escalating tensions over the Sunni kingdom’s execution of a prominent Shiite cleric. BORDERS ARE BACK: Crackdowns on migration and terrorism have killed the concept of a borderless Europe, where you could travel from Spain in the south to Finland in the north without ever having to show your passport. LOTTERIES Sunday midday drawing Pick 3: 7-9-3 Pick 4: 0-0-7-7 Sunday evening drawing Pick 3: 9-5-5 Pick 4: 2-6-9-0 Show Me Cash: 11-14-28-37-38 NEWSROOM Fax: 761-0235 General: 761-0240 Editor: Gary Castor 761-0255 gary@newstribune.com Sports: 761-0256, 761-0257 sports@newstribune.com NEXT NEWS CONTACT BY MAIL The News Tribune is the leading source for local information each day. Please watch for these upcoming stories. News Tribune Co. P.O. 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Access to troubling and violent information and world events can test our resilience. New columnists and a new recipe format are sure to be a hit for local cooks. Quickly find the special of the day in this CLASSIFIED feature each weekday. www.newstribune.com FROM PAGE ONE/NATIONAL MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 A3 Vacation over Obama looking at ways to reduce gun violence Gerry Tritz/News Tribune Attendees at the 29th annual Bridal Spectacular at Firley YMCA take a break between visiting some of the 80 vendors at the event Sunday. Brides: Continued from p. 1 away. Isle of Capri Casino in Boonville, for instance, was giving away a bachelorette party. “I’ve got everything here you need to plan your entire wedding,” said Vicki Arcobasso, the event organizer. The vendors, she said, came from a 90-100 mile radius around Jefferson City. Standoff: Continued from p. 1 Nevada to increase local control over federal land. Critics of the push for more local control have said the federal government should administer the public lands for the widest possible uses, including environmental and recreation. In an interview with The Associated Press at the wildlife refuge Sunday, Ryan Bundy, Ammon Bundy’s brother, said the protesters’ ultimate goal is to turn the land over to local authorities so people can use it free of federal oversight. They want to “restore the rights to people so they can use the land and resources” for ranching, logging, mining and recreation. Ryan Bundy says the federal Autumn Wood of Eldon stopped by Lutz’s Famous BBQ to sample some of the barbecued beef and homemade chips. She came to help her mom find a dress for Wood’s June 25 wedding. She was also looking for seat covers for the event. “It’s really neat,” she said of the bridal event. “It’s huge.” Amber Sturtz of Linn and her family and friends who attended with her stopped by the Fish Eye Views booth to pose for silly photos. She was still early in the planning government has been “tromping on people’s rights and privileges and properties and livelihoods.” “I understand the land needs to be used wisely, but that’s what we as stewards need to do. A rancher is going to take care of his own ranch,” Ryan Bundy said. On Sunday, supplies were seen being delivered to the refuge area, which is remote even by rural Oregon standards. Dwight Hammond has said he and his son plan to peacefully report to prison Monday as ordered by the judge. Harney County Sheriff Dave Ward said the group of armed protesters came to town under false pretenses. “These men came to Harney County claiming to be part of militia groups supporting local ranchers, when in reality these men had alternative motives to attempt to over throw the process for her Oct. 22 wedding, and she was specifically looking for bridesmaid dresses and a photographer. One thing was for sure: She wants hamburgers served at her wedding. She was still learning the wedding terminology. “I love the rip-off dresses,” she said before quickly being corrected by Mandi Steinlage, one of several people with her at the event. “They’re called detachable trains,” Steinlage said with a laugh. county and federal government in hopes to spark a movement across the United States,” Ward said in a statement on Sunday afternoon. The sheriff says he is working with local and federal authorities to keep the citizens in his county safe and to resolve the situation as quickly and peacefully as possible. He is asking people to stay away from the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge for their own safety. He said he does not think any other parts of the county are in immediate danger. Beth Anne Steele, an FBI spokeswoman in Portland, said Saturday that the agency was aware of the situation at the national wildlife refuge. She made no further comment. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, who had been briefed by the FBI agent in charge in Portland, Ore- gon, said most local residents do not support the protesters. “The overwhelming majority of people there very much want to get on with their lives without this disruption and are not in sympathy with a bunch of outsiders,” Wyden told AP. Local residents have expressed fear of potential of violence. A peaceful rally Saturday in support of the Hammonds featured speeches, flags and marching. As marchers reached the courthouse, they tossed hundreds of pennies at the locked door. Their message: Civilians were buying back their government. After the march passed, two girls swooped in to scavenge the pennies. A few blocks away, Hammond and his wife, Susan, greeted marchers, who planted flower bouquets in the snow. Key things to know about the standoff HOW DID THIS SITUATION BEGIN? Tension has been building for weeks in the Burns, Oregon, area over the case of Dwight and Steven Hammond. Dwight Hammond, 73, and Steven Hammond, 46, said they lit fires on federal land in 2001 and 2006 to reduce the growth of invasive plants and protect their property from wildfires. The two were convicted three years ago and served time — the father three months, the son one year. But in October, a federal judge in Oregon ruled their terms were too short under U.S. law and ordered them back to prison for about four years each. AP WHO IS LEADING THE PROTESTERS? The Hammonds have received support from local residents, but the Ryan Bundy talks on the phone at the Malheur National most vocal groups are from outside the area. Ammon Bundy, the son of Wildlife Refuge near Burns, Oregon. Bundy is one of the Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, who was involved in a standoff with the protesters occupying the refuge to object to a prison sengovernment over grazing rights, is among those organizing the opposi- tence for local ranchers for burning federal land. tion at the wildlife refuge. Ammon Bundy and militiamen from other states arrived last month in Burns, some 60 miles from the Hammond ranch. Ammon Bundy has criticized the U.S. government for what he called a anyone within his group/organization speak for the Hammond Family,” the Hammonds’ lawyer W. Alan Schroeder wrote to Sheriff David Ward. failed legal process. Dwight Hammond has said he and his son plan to peacefully report to WHERE IS THE WILDLIFE REFUGE? prison Monday as ordered by the judge. “We gave our word that’s what The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge is about 30 miles south of we would do, and we intend to act on it,” he told The Associated Press Burns in in the high desert of eastern Oregon. The area is very remote, last week. about 280 miles southeast of Portland. WHAT ARE AUTHORITIES DOING? Harney County Sheriff Dave Ward has told people to stay away from OUTSIDERS NOT WELCOMED BY SOME IN OREGON Many locals have told the outside groups to stay away, concerned the area as authorities work to defuse the situation. Beth Anne Steele, their presence could lead to violence. The Hammonds, as well, have an FBI spokeswoman in Portland, told AP the agency was aware of the rebuffed the Bundy’s support for their cause. “Neither Ammon Bundy nor situation at the national wildlife refuge but made no further comment. Continued from p. 1 resigned on the last day of session after admitting to the texts. Months later Democratic Sen. Paul LeVota, of Independence, left office after one intern claimed LeVota sexually harassed her, which spurred another to come forward with similar allegations. LeVota denied the claims. Richardson, of Poplar Bluff, named changing the culture in the Capitol as a top priority when he succeeded Diehl. A recent rule change means all House members and staff for the first time are required to take sexual harassment training every year. But Richardson and others have repeatedly said more needs to be done to repair the damaged perception of the Legislature. He said he plans to refer every ethics bill to a committee for review at his first opportunity Thursday. “What we have seen is a need to improve the overall environment and climate in Jeffverson City,” Richardson said. “We’re going to be willing to tackle anything that we think could improve that environment and create the kind of Legislature that the public expects and they should be entitled to.” election year. The debate about what Obama may do on gun violence already has spilled over into the presidential campaign. Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton has called for more aggressive executive actions on guns, and rival Bernie Sanders said he would support Obama’s expected move. The Vermont senator told ABC’s “This Week” that he believes “there is a wide consensus” that “we should expand and strengthen the instant background check.” He added: “I think that’s what the president is trying to do and I think that will be the right thing to do.” Republican candidates largely oppose efforts to expand background checks or take other steps that curb access to guns. “This president wants to act as if he is a king, as if he is a dictator,” unable to persuade Congress and forcing an “illegal executive action” on the country, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie told “Fox News Sunday.” Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, also on Fox, said Obama’s “first impulse is always to take rights away from law-abiding citizens, and it’s wrong.” In the radio address, Obama said tens of thousands of people have died from gun violence since background check legislation stalled three years ago. “Each time, we’re told that commonsense reforms like background checks might not have stopped the last massacre, or the one before that, so we shouldn’t do anything,” Obama said. “We know that we can’t stop every act of violence. But what if we tried to stop even one?” Federally licensed gun sellers are required by law to seek criminal background checks before completing a sale. But gun control advocacy groups say some of the people who sell firearms at gun shows are not federally licensed, increasing the chance of sales to customers prohibited by law from purchasing guns. Workers return to site of California massacre BURNS, Ore. (AP) — Armed protesters are occupying a building at a national wildlife refuge in Oregon and asking militia members around the country to join them. The protesters went to Malheur National Wildlife Refuge on Saturday following a peaceful rally in support of two Oregon ranchers facing additional prison time for arson. Ethics: WASHINGTON (AP) — Hawaiian vacation over, President Barack Obama says he is energized for his final year in office and ready to tackle unfinished business, turning immediate attention to the issue of gun violence. Obama scheduled a meeting Monday with Attorney General Loretta Lynch to discuss a three-month review of what steps he could take to help reduce gun violence. The president is expected to use executive action to strengthen background checks required for gun purchases. Republicans strongly oppose any moves Obama may make, and legal fights seem likely over what critics would view as infringing on their Second Amendment rights. But Obama is committed to an aggressive agenda in 2016 even as public attention shifts to the presidential election. Obama spent much of his winter vacation out of the public eye, playing golf with friends and dining out with his family. He returned to the White House about noon Sunday. “I am fired up for the year that stretches out before us. That’s because of what we’ve accomplished together over the past seven,” Obama said his weekly radio and Internet address. While in Hawaii, he also worked on his final State of the Union address, scheduled for Jan. 12. The prime-time speech will give the president another chance to try to reassure the public about his national security stewardship after the attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California. Congressional Republicans have outlined a competing agenda for January, saying they will spend the first days of 2016 taking another crack at eliminating keys parts of the president’s health insurance law and ending federal funding for Planned Parenthood. The legislation is unlikely to become law, but it is popular with the GOP base in an Powerball jackpot expected to grow to $400 million Wednesday DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The next Powerball winner will have a chance to claim one of the game’s 10 biggest prizes this week when the jackpot grows to roughly $400 million. Lottery officials say no one claimed Saturday’s $334 million prize, although someone from Pennsylvania won $2 million and three players from California, Connecticut and South Carolina won $1 million in the game. When the jackpot reaches $400 million, it might exceed the size of the sixth-largest prize in Powerball history. That was a $399.4 million prize won in 2013 by someone from South Carolina. The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million. The next drawing will be held Wednesday. www.newstribune.com SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) — In the offices of the Inland Regional Center, Christmas did not come. Tinsel still festoons cubicles. A small tree with presents sits undisturbed. A sign-up sheet to bring in food remains empty of names. The staff was still gearing up for the holidays on Dec. 2, the day 14 people were massacred on the center’s gleaming campus. Few of its 600 employees have gone to the office since, other than a brief visit to gather personal belongings a week after the terror attack. On Monday, they return. While many have continued to work, visiting the homes of autistic children and mentally disabled adults, they haven’t been together in the place where everything froze once law enforcement officers whisked them away. Amid the investigation and cleanup, the campus has been locked behind a chain link fence wrapped in green mesh. Within that perimeter, in one corner, is a second fence. It seals the conference center that San Bernardino County’s health department was renting for a holiday luncheon when the two attackers began their assault. A county restaurant inspector targeting his co-workers was joined by his wife in killing 14 and injuring dozens. The conference building will not reopen Monday, and it’s not clear when it might. For now, the act of reuniting elsewhere on campus will be a huge step forward for Inland Regional Center staff. They miss the friendly faces, the hallway chit chat. They yearn to renew a sense of stability at an institution unmoored by violence. “That’s what I’m hearing from them: ‘We want to be together again. We want to be back at work,’” said Lavinia Johnson, the center’s executive director. Sitting for an interview in a tidy courtyard shaded by two of the center’s large, red stone buildings, Johnson and associate executive director Kevin Urtz reflected on the reopening. Johnson apologized for tree debris that has collected in the absence of caretakers. Several Japanese maples still clung to the last of their red leaves. The plan for Monday morning is, after a welcome and some food in the lounges, to do what social workers and counselors do best — sit and talk. “Just be together again,” Johnson said, “share where they’re at.” op Stitch Sewing Service LLCC Sew Machines Start Starting at $149 573-378-2700 573 378 “Top Quality-Reasonable Prices” SERVICING CING ALL MAKES MA Tues.-Thurs: 8-5 Friday: 8-6 Sat: 8-Noon A4 NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Weekly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS FRIDAY CLOSE $CHG 1WK %CHG 1WK %CHG 1MO %RTN 1YR SEP 47.70 3.27 7.4 18.4 -17.5 Liberty Global A LBTYA 42.36 2.62 6.6 0.7 -15.5 Liberty Global C LBTYK 40.77 2.45 6.4 0.7 -14.7 Tesla Motors Inc TSLA 240.01 9.44 4.1 3.1 7.1 Towers Watson & Co TW 128.46 4.47 3.6 -2.9 21.6 Willis Group Hld WSH 48.57 1.65 3.5 6.8 10.8 Signet Jewelers SIG 123.69 4.05 3.4 -3.3 -6.7 Buckeye Part BPL 65.96 2.07 3.2 3.8 -12.4 Williams Cos WMB 25.70 0.79 3.2 -22.7 -40.8 Ferrari NV RACE 48.00 1.25 2.7 2.0 0.0 Energy Transfer Eqty ETE 13.74 0.31 2.3 -18.5 -50.4 Amazon.com Inc AMZN 675.89 13.10 2.0 1.4 122.1 IHS Inc IHS 118.43 2.06 1.8 -1.5 3.3 Equinix Inc EQIX 302.40 5.21 1.8 2.4 39.5 Sealed Air SEE 44.60 0.79 1.8 -1.2 5.9 COMPANY TICKER Spectra Energy Ptrs A wedding without debt MarketPulse HOUSING WEALTH Even as the pace of growth in U.S. home prices eased in 2015, the value of the nation’s housing stock edged closer to levels last seen during the peak of the housing bubble a decade ago. The value of all U.S. homes grew 4.1 percent to roughly $28.5 trillion, according to a new report from real estate data tracker Zillow. The nation’s housing stock has recovered about $5.3 trillion in value since December 2011, the bottom of the housing collapse. It needs to gain another $782 billion to reach the peak value of $29.2 trillion in October 2006, the firm said. Total value of U. S. homes 30 trillion 28.5 10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS 28 Valeant Pharma VRX 101.65 -12.46 -10.9 8.5 -28.5 Marathon Oil MRO 12.59 -1.34 -9.6 -23.9 -54.0 Mosaic Co MOS 27.59 -2.16 -7.3 -11.1 -36.2 Kinder Morgan Inc KMI 14.92 -1.16 -7.2 -22.5 -61.2 CF Industries CF 40.81 -2.44 -5.6 -11.0 -22.6 Barrick Gold ABX 7.38 -0.44 -5.6 -2.5 -30.8 Potash Corp POT 17.12 -1.00 -5.5 -10.8 -47.0 Anadarko Petrol APC 48.58 -2.64 -5.2 -16.4 -40.8 Sprint Corp S 3.62 -0.19 -5.0 2.5 0.0 Goldcorp Inc GG 11.56 -0.60 -4.9 -4.2 -35.6 %RTN 1YR 26 24 22 20 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 Source: Zillow hours on one day of your life. Dear Dave, How do you have a wedding Or, you can find one that’s much cheaper — even something without debt? that’s been worn one time — for Lynn a couple hundred dollars. Think Dear Lynn, Wow, where do I start on this that’s tacky? Well, let me tell you what’s even more tacky one? I guess the best and dumb — going way is to tell the truth. DAVE SAYS $15,000 to $20,000 in Honey, that question debt for one day! kind of makes you To have a wedding sound like a little prinwithout debt you have cess. to be creative and How do you have think within your buda wedding without get. That means growdebt? It’s really simple. ing up and not throwYou have a wedding ing a temper tantrum with the money you just because you can’t have. There’s nothhave every little thing ing wrong with small, Dave Ramsey you want. Most peoinexpensive weddings. ple don’t have lavish, And once you accept expensive weddings, that and start thinking about things from a mature, and guess what? Years down the adult point of view, you’ll start road they’re still married, madly realizing you can scrimp and in love and laughing and hugsave and have a really nice, small ging when they remember the best day of their lives. wedding. Please, don’t turn what’s supLots of people have beautiful, memorable ceremonies and posed to be a happy occasion even small receptions for less into a financial mess that will than $1,000. Sure, you can run take years to clean up! Dear Dave, out, go into debt and wear an My husband works for a $8,000 wedding dress for a few large company and receives restricted stock bonuses of approximately $5,000 each year. We’re not sure exactly how long they’re restricted, and we both wonder if we’re allowed to sell these options? Patty Dear Patty, You said your husband works for a large company, so my guess is they do this as an employee retention move. That’s why they restrict the stock. They’re trying to get people to stay with the company, and you’ll only be able to sell them after they are no longer restricted. Usually, these kinds of things have a one- or two-year restriction. I doubt they’d put a fiveyear hold on it, but check with the company to find out the specifics. They can tell him when the stock is free to be sold. If it were me, I wouldn’t hold on to too much of it. I don’t own single stocks. They have too much risk for my taste. Keep a little bit, if you want, but don’t put all or even most of your financial eggs into that one basket! 15 BEST MID-CAP STOCKS FRIDAY CLOSE $CHG 1WK %CHG 1WK %CHG 1MO WTW 22.80 4.80 26.7 -10.8 -9.1 TGI 39.75 5.35 15.6 2.0 -40.5 -51.3 COMPANY TICKER Weight Watchers Triumph Group Rice Energy Inc RICE 10.90 1.04 10.5 -10.4 Pharmerica Corp PMC 35.00 2.70 8.4 6.1 66.8 Globant SA GLOB 37.51 2.80 8.1 7.0 150.3 0.0 CSRA Inc CSRA 30.00 2.08 7.4 2.0 Atlassian Corp plc TEAM 30.08 1.87 6.6 8.3 0.0 Exelixis Inc EXEL 5.64 0.35 6.6 5.2 318.5 Neurocrine Biosci NBIX 56.57 3.32 6.2 11.0 153.9 Omnicell Inc OMCL 31.08 1.78 6.1 3.5 -5.5 Lumentum Hldgs LITE 22.02 1.24 6.0 11.2 0.0 MPLX LP MPLX 39.33 2.22 6.0 20.5 -44.9 Sthwstn Energy SWN -76.9 Crown Media Holdings CRWN Rovi Corp ROVI 7.11 0.40 6.0 -13.2 5.61 0.28 5.3 -1.9 57.6 16.66 0.80 5.0 50.0 -26.1 -73.5 10 WORST MID-CAP STOCKS SOFTWARE M&A PICKUP? Companies have been increasingly investing in cloudcomputing, cybersecurity and massive data collection and analysis and shifting away from traditional networking, data storage and database projects. That’s likely to accelerate in 2016, according to a research note published this week by FBR & Co. analyst Daniel Ives. He anticipates that companies with strong offerings in cloud, security and “big data” analytics will be well-positioned to take advantage of the market’s growth. The trend should also make consolidation in the software industry a fertile growth area in 2016 as some of the next-generation software companies become attractive acquisition targets for bigger, traditional tech companies. SunEdison Inc SUNE 5.09 -0.83 -14.0 35.0 NovoCure Ltd NVCR 22.36 -3.57 -13.8 -6.9 0.0 AP Stratasys Ltd SSYS 23.48 -3.31 -12.4 -6.5 -70.6 Seadrill Ltd SDRL 3.39 -0.44 -11.5 -42.0 -71.7 Freeport McMoRan FCX 6.77 -0.80 -10.6 -11.8 -68.9 Carrizo Oil & Gas CRZO 29.58 -3.27 -10.0 -19.0 -31.0 Copa Holdings CPA 48.26 -5.18 -9.7 -8.8 -49.9 Navient Corp NAVI 11.45 -1.16 -9.2 -2.5 -45.6 Meat labels are seen at a grocery store in Washington. It’s now harder to find out where your meat was born, raised and slaughtered. After more than a decade of wrangling, Congress repealed a meat labeling law last month that required retailers to include the animals country of origin on packages of pork and beef. It’s a major victory for the meat industry, which has fought the law in Congress and the courts since the early 2000s. PRA Group Inc PRAA 34.69 -3.50 -9.2 -11.3 -38.5 Laredo Petroleum LPI 7.99 -0.80 -9.1 -22.2 -25.3 $CHG 1WK %CHG 1WK %CHG 1MO %RTN 1YR US repeals meat labeling law after trade rulings against it 15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS COMPANY TICKER FRIDAY CLOSE Resource America REXI 6.13 1.52 33.0 9.9 -29.3 Actinium Pharma ATNM 3.23 0.60 22.8 57.6 -46.0 Forsight Energy LP FELP 3.53 0.63 21.7 -3.0 -75.1 Neovasc Inc NVCN 4.50 0.80 21.6 7.9 -35.4 -56.2 Energy Fuels Inc UUUU 2.95 0.51 20.9 41.8 Kura Oncology Inc KURA 8.40 1.44 20.7 5.3 0.0 Delek Logisitcs DKL 35.69 6.02 20.3 -4.3 -4.4 Agile Therapeutics AGRX 9.76 1.62 19.9 8.2 49.0 Atlantic Power Corp AT 1.97 0.31 18.7 -0.5 -32.5 Civista Bancshares CIVB 12.83 1.90 17.4 18.6 17.9 Auris Medical Hldg EARS 4.89 0.72 17.3 37.7 20.6 Hoegh LNG Ptrs LP HMLP 18.62 2.72 17.1 25.4 -4.5 Vuzix Corp VUZI 7.59 1.09 16.8 19.7 93.4 Danaos Corp DAC 5.99 0.82 15.9 4.1 2.4 Stratus Properties STRS 20.41 2.78 15.8 26.8 43.5 LATE PAYMENTS Borrowers are increasingly failing to make timely payments on their mortgage, auto and credit card debt. An index that measures credit defaults across all types of consumer credit increased slightly in November for the second month in a row, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices and Experian. That’s not yet long enough to establish a new trend, notes David Blitzer, managing director and chairman of S&P Dow Jones Indices’ Index Committee. Even so, Blitzer notes that consumers’ financial condition bears watching going forward. 10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS Chimerix Inc CMRX 8.95 -26.62 -74.8 -75.0 -78.0 Natural Hlth Trends NHTC 33.53 -12.36 -26.9 -25.3 228.2 Breitburn Energy BBEP 0.67 -0.17 -20.6 -46.8 -81.3 Peabody Energy Corp BTU 7.68 -1.96 -20.3 -28.6 -93.0 Empire Resorts NYNY 18.00 -4.20 -18.9 -8.9 -54.4 Westport Innovations WPRT 2.01 -0.46 -18.6 -8.6 -42.8 Patriot National Inc PN 6.71 -1.48 -18.1 -51.6 0.0 Tronox Ltd TROX 3.91 -0.86 -18.0 -35.4 -78.2 Flamel Technologies FLML 12.21 -2.64 -17.8 -16.5 -17.5 CIFC Corp CIFC 5.58 -1.20 -17.7 -17.6 -19.9 Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are $100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8 billion (large). AP WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s now harder to find out where your beef or pork was born, raised and slaughtered. After more than a decade of wrangling, Congress repealed a labeling law last month that required retailers to include the animal’s country of origin on packages of red meat. It’s a major victory for the meat industry, which had fought the law in Congress and the courts since the early 2000s. Lawmakers said they had no choice but to get rid of the labels after the World Trade Organization repeatedly ruled against them. The WTO recently authorized Canada and Mexico, which had challenged the law, to begin more than $1 billion in economic retaliation against the United States. “U.S. exporters can now breathe a sigh of relief,” said Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas, chairman of the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee. The longtime opponent of the labels helped add the repeal to a massive year-end spending bill. After the law was passed, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said the government immediately would stop requiring the labels. Consumer groups say the repeal is a disappointment just as consumers are asking for more information on their food packages. Advocates say the labels help people make more informed buying decisions and encourage purchases of American meat. Before repeal, the labels told shoppers that a particular cut of meat was “born in Canada, raised and slaughtered in the United States” or “born, raised and slaughtered in the United States.” Congress first required the labels in 2002 amid fears of mad cow disease from imported cattle. The labels weren’t on most packages until 2009, though, due to delays pushed by the meat industry. Repeal became inevitable once the United States lost all its WTO appeals and the retaliation became a possibility. But the consumer groups criticized Congress for repealing the law for ground meat and pork in addition to the fresh cuts of meat that were the subject of WTO concerns. The bill was “a holiday gift to the meatpacking industry from Congress,” complained the advocacy group Food and Water Watch. Meatpackers who buy Mexican cattle were some of the law’s most aggressive opponents. www.newstribune.com The repeal also was a big defeat for lawmakers from northern border states where U.S. ranchers directly compete with Canadian ranchers. Those lawmakers insisted on including the labeling in the 2002 and 2008 farm bills and this year fought to replace it with a voluntary program once the WTO rulings came down. But after years of success, this time they were not able to find enough support. Roger Johnson of the National Farmers Union, which has heavy membership in those states, said the group was “furious” about the repeal. “Packers will be able to once again deliberately deceive consumers,” Johnson said. Still, there was some good news for food labeling advocates in the spending bill. Despite an aggressive push by the food industry, lawmakers decided not to add language that would have blocked mandatory labeling of genetically modified ingredients. Also, a provision by Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, would require labeling of genetically modified salmon recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The issue is expected to come up again in 2016, with Vermont set to require labeling on genetically modified food this summer. Health insurer apologizes for early morning robocalls QUINCY, Mass. (AP) — A Massachusetts health insurer is apologizing after sending automated phone calls to as many as 10,000 senior citizens in the wee hours of the morning. Tufts Health Plan accidentally sent the robocall between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. Tuesday to remind patients to get their flu shots. A spokeswoman for the insurer said the call was supposed to go out between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. and attributed the mistake to “human error.” She says the calls went out to people over 65 enrolled in the Tufts Medicare Preferred HMO option. Several clients called the health care provider to ask about the early call. One man said he was having coffee at 4:45 a.m. when the phone rang and thought it was an emergency. NATIONAL MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 A5 Year of political pregame gives way to a sprint into Iowa DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — It’s been a year of town halls and weekend forums and lunchtime meet-andgreets for those who would be president, with nights spent sparring in televised debates and endless days fundraising to pay for TV ads, direct-mail fliers and organizers to get out the vote. All of it is aimed at people like Jocelyn Beyer, a Republican from the small town of Sully in rural central Iowa, who says despite the many months of political clamor, she’s only just now starting to think about her vote for the White House. “I can’t say I’ve paid much attention,” Beyer said. “The moral issues are what I focus on. If I had to vote today, I’d vote for Ted Cruz.” While that’s not a solid “yes” for the Texas senator, at least he’s doing better with Beyer than he is with Brian Metcalf, a Republican from nearby Pella. Metcalf is thinking about Cruz, but also former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. That is, when he’s spending any time thinking about the race. “Until now, it’s just been noise,” he said. “But I’d like to see someone with a Reagan-esque approach.” For all the attention showered on early state voters in the past year by candidates, their unpaid volunteers and high-dollar admakers — and, yes, journalists, too — the truth is that what happened in 2015 was only the pregame show. The race for the White House starts in earnest this week as voters such as Beyer and Metcalf begin to tune in and the candidates try to win them over during a four-week sprint to the leadoff Iowa caucuses on Feb. 1. It’s then that voters have their first say and push pundits, predictions and polls aside. “The race is still fluid,” said Beth Myers, who managed 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney’s campaign and supports Bush in 2016. “There’s still a twist or two in this primary story that we don’t know yet.” Where to begin? It’s easier to start with the Democrats. Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont hopes an upset in Iowa and a victory in the New Hampshire primary a week later will dent the apparent inevitability of front-runner Hillary Clinton. Wins in the first two states for the former first lady, New York senator and secretary of state would all but cement her place atop her party’s ticket. There is no such clarity in the Republican race. Despite shedding five candidates before New Year’s Day, the GOP contest is an unpredictable mix of a dozen hopefuls with vastly different visions for the party and the country. Ahead now in Iowa is Cruz, who spent 2015 quietly building a traditional campaign organization and will kick off his month with a bus tour — six days, 28 cities — covering the state’s most fertile ground for Republicans. Candidates often try to recruit a political leader to stand for them in each of Iowa’s 99 counties. Cruz has also sought a pastor in each to do the same, hoping to corner the market on the evangelical voters who make up a significant part of the GOP caucuses. “For Cruz, it’s about the complete consolidation of the evangelical wing to snuff the life from the others,” said Phil Musser, a Republican consultant who is not affiliated with a campaign. While Cruz has edged ahead in preference polls of Iowa voters in recent weeks, nationally, he still trails the unquestioned political star of 2015: Donald Trump. The billionaire real-estate mogul has so far forgone the grind-it-out approach in favor of free media exposure and a few rallies a week in front of largely adoring crowds. “He says what everybody’s thinking, and he’s not afraid to say it,” said Trump supporter Bill Kullander of Des Moines. The unknown for Trump: Are Kullander and the thousands of others who pack the bleachers at Trump’s rallies and tell pollsters he’s their top choice for the GOP nomination likely voters? Or are they merely fans entertained by his show? “If I do have a frustration, it’s that we’re being led by the nose, and the news media is led by the nose, to think that somehow Trump is going to win this because of these polls,” Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, whose numbers in preference polls hardly register by comparison, said Sunday in an interview with NBC. “The polls don’t, I believe, capture who’s going to actually vote.” Voters are not likely to find Trump dropping in at one of Iowa’s many Pizza Ranch restaurants to ask for their support, as Cruz will do on his bus tour. But Trump’s top adviser in Iowa is a veteran organizer who ran former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum’s winning 2012 caucus campaign. Also, it’s notable that after almost no paid advertising in 2015, Trump said last week he plans to start spending at least $2 million a week on TV ads in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, which holds the South’s first primary on Feb. 20. “Honestly, I don’t want to take any chances,” Trump said last week. Neither Cruz nor Trump will win the nomination with a victory in Iowa, but caucus-goers probably will deliver a verdict on whether several GOP candidates continue on to New Hampshire. Count Santorum and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who won the caucuses in 2008, in that group, and maybe retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, too. Carson was an early favorite in Iowa among evangelical and tea party conservatives, but he enters January without several members of his senior staff. They quit last week and questioned his readiness for the White House on their way out. Candidates with more traditional political experience will spend the month trying to bridge the gap between the anger and frustration that’s powered Trump’s rise and the Republican establishment, which desperately wants to win after eight years out of the White House. For Rubio and Bush, as well as New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Ohio Gov. John Kasich, that likely means lighting the match with a strong finish in Iowa, then igniting their bid with a win in New Hampshire. Improved economy creates prison staffing crisis in Kansas AP the damaged stern of the sunken freighter El Faro is seen on the sea floor, 15,000-feet deep near the Bahamas. NTSB photos show El Faro in final place JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Federal accident investigators are considering launching another search of the wreckage of a freighter that sank in October in an attempt to locate the ship’s “black box.” Tom Roth-Roffy, the lead investigator for National Transportation Safety Board, told The Associated Press that a weekslong search found one of the El Faro’s missing decks, but not the mast where the ship’s voyage data recorder was attached. The agency on Sunday released the first images of the ship in its final resting place. “There were no human remains found whatsoever, and no personal effects whatsoever,” Roth-Roffy said. “I think we found one boot.” The El Faro sank Oct. 1 after losing engine power and getting caught in a Category 4 hurricane while sailing from Jacksonville to San Juan, Puerto Rico. There were 33 mariners aboard and no survivors. Roth-Roffy said the NTSB would need to launch a second search of the wreckage 15,000 feet below the sea if it wants to find the data recorder, which would have recorded the captain’s final transmissions. They are still determining if and when such a search would occur. The images of the sunken ship show a breach in the El Faro’s hull and its main navigation tower missing. Roth-Roffy says crews did locate one of the missing decks about a half-mile away from the main ship. Images show it resting on the seafloor, its windows broken out. The ship’s stern, or rear end, was buried more deeply than the bow, or front, Roth-Roffy said. Investigators are still piecing events of the sinking together, but at this point they’ve ruled out a major structure failure as a cause of the El Faro’s sinking, Roth-Roffy said. “The issue with the detachment of the upper two decks, we’re looking at that carefully,” he said. Even without the data recorder, the images taken by remote-controlled underwater vehicles are helping to shed some light on the case. Roth-Roffy says all of the ship’s cargo containers except for four were gone. The El Faro was carrying automobiles. Determining what happened to the ship will be more difficult without the data recorder, but NTSB’s investigators have said they are still confident they’ll be able to find answers. After suspending their search for the data recorder in November, Roth-Roffy says they may go back to search again. The recorder was attached to the ship’s main mast, a 35-foot tall structure that crews haven’t yet located. The data recorder charts the date, time and speed of a marine vessel, and also records conversations on the bridge that could include key decision-making between captain and crew. QUICKNATION Body apparently dragged 6 miles in hit-and-run NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans police say a driver apparently hit a pedestrian in the city’s French Quarter and dragged the body more than 6 miles, crossing a Mississippi River bridge to the other side. Police say a driver found the disfigured body about 3:30 a.m. Friday in the road leading from the bridge. A police Facebook posting says investigators believe the body is that of an unidentified pedestrian hit in the French Quarter. It says witnesses told investigators a black sedan with tinted windows struck the man and drove off. Officer Garry Flot, a police spokesman, said in an email Sunday that police don’t have further leads to the car or driver. 2 of 3 killed at cemetery were married couple ELLSWORTH, Kan. (AP) — Unemployment is down and wages are up in Kansas — except for corrections officers. They are leaving state prisons in droves because of low pay, creating a public safety crisis that legislators will have to deal with on top of plugging a budget hole. Their starting pay is about 33 percent less than the state’s average hourly wage of $20.20, and overall wages are about a quarter lower than the national average. The annual turnover rate is up to nearly 30 percent. Things are so bad that the state is hiring 18-year-olds to manage hardened criminals, despite some prison leaders’ misgivings. “You don’t pay me enough to get urine or feces thrown at me by an inmate,” said Bruce Martin, who left his job at the state’s oldest prison in Lansing in September, even though he was earning a relatively good-forKansas wage of about $18 an hour. Kansas cut spending on prisons and juvenile justice programs during the Great Recession, and the current spending is still below the 2008 amount. The state also has struggled to balance its budget since Republican Gov. Sam Brownback persuaded the GOP-dominated Legislature into enacting massive income tax cuts in 2012 and 2013 as an economic stimulus. Brownback and fellow conservatives credit those cuts with boosting the state’s economy and helping drop the unemployment rate to 4 percent in November, but government spending still will be pinched by at least $160 million next fiscal year. Brownback said he favors higher wages for corrections officers and he sees “decent” support among legislators but added, “The key here will be finding the resources to do it with.” In Ellsworth, where the central Kansas hills give way to the Great Plains, local leaders wooed a prison three decades ago to anchor the local economy. The area’s average weekly wage has grown nearly 23 percent in four years, to $18.60 an hour, topping what some sergeants in the prison complex’s red-brick buildings earn by $3.50 or more. “It’s made our work pool that we AP Corrections officer Cynthia Miller handcuffs an inmate before he is transported from a segregation unit at the Ellsworth Correctional Facility in Ellsworth, Kan. Low wages among Kansas corrections officers are causing many to leave the field, leaving about 9 percent of the positions in the state’s prisons unfilled. choose from smaller and we have to draw from farther and farther away,” said Warden Dan Schnurr, a 30-year prison system veteran. Later, he added: “You’ve got people coming and going all the time.” To make the pay competitive, Kansas would need to spend at least a few million dollars a year, and the figure could be $20 million, according to state Sen. Laura Kelly, of Topeka, the ranking Democrat on the Senate budget committee. And Republican Rep. John Rubin, of Shawnee, caused a stir this fall by suggesting during a committee hearing that the necessary funds should be diverted from public schools, saying he’s worried prison shifts are short-staffed, or staffed with officers working overtime or inexperienced employees. “I’m concerned that an incident could occur in one of our correctional institutions,” Rubin said. Uniformed officers statewide received a raise in 2012, but the starting pay for a new officer is $13.61 an hour, or $28,300 a year. But the state Department of Labor reports that the state’s average hourly wage rose also, to its present $20.20 an hour, or more than $42,000 a year. And the average Kansas wage for all corrections and officers and bailiffs in 2014 was $16.39 an hour, or 24 percent less than the national figure of $21.59, according to federal data. Several former officers at the Lansing prison, which houses 2,400 inmates north of the Kansas City area, said multiple factors, including stress and short staffing, had them finding a way out last year. Kellon Carlyle, a former sergeant who was earning $15.38 an hour when he left in April, now hopes to land a federal building security job at more than $26 an hour. “It’s not worth it,” he said of the prison job, “my health has actually improved.” More than 180 officer positions remain open at state prisons or juvenile centers, or about 9 percent of the roughly 2,000 jobs. In July, the state Department of Corrections began allowing 18-yearolds to become officers — even though professionals generally have misgivings about their maturity and judgment. “They’ve got zero life skills, very little street smarts,” Martin said. Nestle was sued in October by environmental and public interest had become estranged from the family and was distraught because Jan. groups who allege the Swiss-based company is operating its Strawberry 3 is the 5-year anniversary of his late wife’s death. Canyon facility on a permit that expired in 1988. The groups led by the for Biological Diversity said the prolonged drought in California Honda confirms Takata air bag killed young driver Center combined with the water bottling operation is affecting wildlife. DETROIT (AP) — Honda Motor Co. says a defective air bag made by Takata Corp. was responsible for the death of a driver near Pittsburgh. 4 shot dead including man, wife It’s the ninth death worldwide attributed to Takata air bags, which can inflate with too much force and injure occupants with metal fragROWLAND HEIGHTS, Calif. (AP) — A man shot and killed his wife ments. and two others in his home on New Year’s Eve before his son wrestled A 13-year-old boy was driving a relative’s 2001 Honda Accord Coupe the gun away and fatally shot him in a chain of events apparently set off on July 22, 2015 when it crashed and the air bag inflated. by a dispute over a washing machine, authorities said. Michael John Morey, 54, shot and killed his bedridden wife, Betty Jean Morey; his son’s 48-year-old girlfriend, Linda Patricia Merrell, who Virginia man dies after being hit by train also lives at the house in Rowland Heights; and a 27-year-old house HARRISONBURG, Va. (AP) — A Virginia man has died after being hit guest, Ernesto Calzadilla, Los Angeles County coroner and sheriff’s by a Norfolk Southern train. officials said. Virginia State Police Sgt. Les Tyler told media outlets that 18-year-old Jerrick Hammer of Elkton was struck while walking along the tracks on US marshal in South Dakota kills SC suspect Saturday. Hammer died at the scene. The incident remains under investigation. SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — A U.S. Marshals Service deputy in ONTARIO, Calif. (AP) — Authorities say a man and a woman killed by a former in-law in a murder-suicide at a Southern California cemetery were a married couple from North Hollywood visiting a grave. US Forest Service reviews Nestle operation Police in Ontario say 60-year-old Misak Minasyan and 59-year-old SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) — The U.S. Forest Service has begun Hripsime Minasyan were fatally shot by Karapet Kalajian Saturday at an environmental review of Nestle Waters North America’s bottling Bellevue Memorial Park. City News Service reports the 71-year-old Kalajian had been married operations in Southern California’s San Bernardino National Forest, to the murdered woman’s sister. Investigators said Sunday that Kalajian according to a newspaper report. www.newstribune.com South Dakota shot and killed a man who was wanted in a homicide in South Carolina, authorities said. Sioux Falls Police Officer Sam Clemens said authorities received a tip that Lonnie Haskell Powers Jr., 37, of Summerville, South Carolina, was in Sioux Falls, and that he was armed. They tracked Powers to a parking lot at Lewis Drug on Saturday afternoon. A6 INTERNATIONAL MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Saudis cut ties to Iran after cleric execution TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Saudi Arabia announced Sunday it was severing diplomatic relations with Shiite powerhouse Iran amid escalating tensions over the Sunni kingdom’s execution of a prominent Shiite cleric. The move came hours after protesters stormed and set fire to the Saudi Embassy in Tehran and followed harsh criticism by Iran’s top leader of the Saudis’ execution of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said Iranian diplomatic personnel had 48 hours to leave his country and all Saudi diplomatic personnel in Iran had been called home. The mass execution of al-Nimr and 46 others — the largest carried out by Saudi Arabia in three and a half decades — laid bare the sectarian divisions gripping the region as demonstrators took to the streets from Bahrain to Pakistan in protest. It also illustrated the kingdom’s new aggressiveness under King Salman. During his reign, Saudi Arabia has led a coalition fighting Shiite rebels in Yemen and staunchly opposed regional Shiite power Iran, even as Tehran struck a nuclear deal with world powers. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned Saudi Arabia on Sunday of “divine revenge” over al-Nimr’s death, while Riyadh accused Tehran of supporting “terrorism” in a war of words that threatened to escalate even as the U.S. and the European Union sought to calm the region. Al-Jubeir told a news conference in Riyadh that the Iranian regime has “a long record of violations of foreign diplomatic missions,” dating back to the occupation of the U.S. Embassy in 1979, and such incidents constitute “a flagrant violation of all international agreements,” according to the official Saudi Press Agency. He said Iran’s “hostile policy” was aimed “at destabilizing the region’s security,” accusing Tehran of smuggling weapons and explosives and planting terrorist cells in the kingdom and other countries in the region. He vowed that Saudi Arabia will not allow Iran “to undermine our security.” “The history of Iran is full of negative and hostile interference in Arab countries, always accompanied with subversion, demolition and killing of innocent souls,” al-Jubeir said, just before announcing the severing of diplomatic relations. Al-Nimr was a central figure in Arab Spring-inspired protests by Saudi Arabia’s Shiite minority until his arrest in 2012. He was convicted of terrorism charges but denied advocating violence. On Saturday, Saudi Arabia put al-Nimr and three other Shiite dissidents to death, along with a number of al-Qaida militants. Al-Nimr’s execution drew protests from Shiites around the world, who backed his call for reform and wider political freedom for their sect. While the split between Sunnis and Shiites dates back to the early days of Islam and disagreements over the successor to Prophet Muhammad, those divisions have only grown as they intertwine with regional politics, with both Iran and Saudi Arabia vying to be the Mideast’s top power. Iran accuses Saudi Arabia of supporting terrorism in part because it backs Syrian rebel groups fighting to oust its embattled ally, President Bashar Assad. Riyadh points to Iran’s backing of the Lebanese Hezbollah and other Shiite militant groups in the region as a sign of its support for terrorism. Iran also has backed Shiite rebels in Yemen known as Houthis. Khamenei, the Iranian supreme leader, condemned al-Nimr’s execution, saying Sunday the cleric “neither invited people to take up arms nor hatched covert plots. The only thing he did was public criticism.” Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard said Saudi Arabia’s “medieval act of savagery” would lead to the “downfall” of the country’s monarchy. Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Ministry said that by condemning the execution, Iran had “revealed its true face represented in support for terrorism.” In Tehran, a protest outside the Saudi Embassy early Sunday quickly grew violent as protesters threw stones and gasoline bombs at the embassy, setting part of the building ablaze, according to Gen. Hossein Sajedinia, the country’s top police official, the Tasnim news agency reported. AP Smoke rises as Iranian protesters set fire to the Saudi embassy in Tehran on Sunday. Protesters upset over the execution of a Shiite cleric in Saudi Arabia set fires to the Saudi embassy in Tehran. Forty people were arrested and investigators were pursuing other suspects, Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dowlatabadi said, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani condemned Saudi Arabia’s execution of al-Nimr, but also branded those who attacked the Saudi Embassy as “extremists.” “It is unjustifiable,” he said. Hundreds of protesters later demonstrated in front of the embassy and in a central Tehran square, where street signs near the embassy were replaced with ones bearing the slain sheikh’s name. Western powers sought to calm the tensions. QUICKWORLD 6.7 quake hits India’s northeast GAUHATI, India (AP) — A pre-dawn earthquake Monday rocked India’s remote northeast region but there was no immediate word on casualties. India’s Meteorological Department said the epicenter of the 6.7 magnitude earthquake was in Tamenglong region of Manipur state. It said the quake struck at a depth ofabout 10 miles in the India-Myanmar border region. The U.S. Geological Survey said the depth wasabout 34 miles. People panicked and rushed out of their homes in Gauhati, the capital of Assam state. The Press Trust of India said there were no immediate reports of casualties. Other details were not immediately known. Developer pledges to repair Dubai tower in New Year’s fire DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The developer of a Dubai skyscraper that caught fire on New Year’s Eve and burned through the city’s annual fireworks display says it will quickly repair the building. Emaar Properties said Sunday that a team of consultants is already working to repair the damage to the 63-story The Address Downtown tower. Officials also said the building was not fitted with any fireworks for the New Year’s display when it caught fire Thursday night. 200 rescued off Greece so far in 2016 ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greece’s coast guard says 217 migrants have been rescued by authorities since the start of the new year in four separate incidents. Migrants, the majority of them refugees from Syria’s civil war, keep trying to enter the European Union despite the cold and rough seas. A coast guard spokeswoman said conditions in the eastern Aegean Sea were “very unfavorable” with high winds prevailing. 2 climbers killed in French Alps avalanche PARIS (AP) — Two Lithuanian climbers have been killed in an avalanche in the French Alps and an official is warning of continued risk in the coming hours. French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said in a statement that the two climbers were killed Sunday in the Argentiere sector of the Mont Blanc range, near the skiing and climbing hub of Chamonix. The exact details of the incident are unclear. US seeks extradition of former Honduran vice president TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — Honduras’ government says it has received a request from the Embassy official: US shuts down United States for the extradition of former vice president and businessman Jaime Rosenthal, who is drone operation in Ethiopia accused of money laundering. ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — The U.S. govForeign Minister Arturo Corrales says the request ernment has shut down its drone operation base in should be sent to Honduras’ Supreme Court by southern Ethiopia, an embassy official announced. Tuesday. A decision has been reached that the base in Arba Addressing a news conference Saturday, Corrales Minch, 280 miles south of Addis Ababa, is no longer called the U.S. extradition request for Rosenthal “bad necessary, embassy spokesman David Kennedy told news for the country.” The Associated Press by email. Israel charges 2 Jewish extremists in deadly arson JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel on Sunday charged two Jewish extremists in an arson attack that killed a Palestinian toddler and his parents last July — culminating a drawn-out investigation into a case that has helped fuel months of Israeli-Palestinian violence. The indictments came as Israel said it had broken up a ring of Jewish extremists wanted in a series of attacks on Palestinian and Christian targets. While Israel’s prime minister trumpeted the arrests as a victory for law and order, the charges drew criticism from Palestinians, who said they were too little and too late, and from the suspects’ relatives, who claimed their loved ones had been tortured by Israeli interrogators. Video shows IS fighters killing 5 ‘spies’ for Britain BEIRUT (AP) — A video circulated online Sunday purported to show the Islamic State group killing five men accused of spying for Britain in Syria. The high-quality footage bore the markings of the IS media wing, and shows five men “confessing” to filming and photographing sites in exchange for money within Raqqa, the capital of the Islamic State group’s self-declared caliphate. It could not be independently verified. The video then cuts to the men kneeling, lined up in orange jumpsuits in the desert, where they are shot in the head by masked men. Gunmen raid building in Mazar-i-Sharif KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Gunmen stormed a building in the city of Mazar-i-Sharif Sunday evening, prompting a shootout with security forces, an Afghan official said. Sher Jan Durani, spokesman for the provincial police chief in Balkh province, confirmed that a number of attackers had entered a building near the Indian consulate and begun firing on security forces. He said the gunmen carried RPGs and light weapons, and that security forces had surrounded the area. There were no immediate reports of casualties, he said. Hong Kong unsettled by case of 5 missing booksellers HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong pro-democracy lawmakers said Sunday that they will press the government for answers after a fifth employee of a publishing company specializing in books critical of mainland China’s leadership went missing. Lawmaker Albert Ho said the city was “shocked and appalled” by the disappearance of Lee Bo. Like the four others who have disappeared in recent months, Lee is associated with publisher Mighty Current. While there’s been no official word on what happened to the five missing people, Ho told reporters that it appears their disappearances are linked to the publishing company’s books. In Washington, State Department spokesman John Kirby said the Obama administration was aware of the Saudis’ severing of ties with Tehran. “We believe that diplomatic engagement and direct conversations remain essential in working through differences and we will continue to urge leaders across the region to take affirmative steps to calm tensions,” Kirby said. Earlier, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini spoke to Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif by phone and urged Tehran to “defuse the tensions and protect the Saudi diplomats,” according to a statement. The disruption in relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran may have implica- tions for peace efforts in Syria. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and others spent significant time trying to bring the countries to the negotiating table and they both sat together at talks aimed at finding a diplomatic solution to the civil war. Last month, Saudi Arabia convened a meeting of Syrian opposition figures that was designed to create a delegation to attend peace talks with the Syrian government that are supposed to begin in mid-January. Across the region, demonstrators took to the streets Sunday in protest over the execution of al-Nimr. In Bahrain, police fired tear gas and birdshot at demonstrators on Sitra Island, south of the capital, Manama, wounding some. After 1 million migrants, Europe’s borders are back STOCKHOLM (AP) — Since it opened in 2000, the Oresund bridge between Sweden and Denmark has been a towering symbol of European integration and hassle-free travel across borders that people didn’t even notice were there. On Monday new travel restrictions imposed by Sweden to stem a record flow of migrants are transforming the bridge into a striking example of how national boundaries are re-emerging. A year of clampdowns on migration and terrorism has all but killed the idea of a borderless Europe where you could drive or train-hop from Spain in the south to Norway in the north without ever having to show your passport. “We’re turning back the clock,” said Andreas Onnerfors, who lives in Lund, on the Swedish side of the bridge. An associate professor in intellectual history, he said he’s benefited from the free flow of people and ideas across the bridge — he’s studied on both sides and taught students from both Sweden and Denmark. “We’re going back to a time when the bridge didn’t exist,” he said, referring to the ID checkpoints being set up Monday on the Danish side for train passengers wishing to cross over to Sweden. The move is meant to stop undocumented migrants from reaching Sweden, which abruptly reversed its open-door policy after receiving more than 160,000 asylum-seekers last year, mainly from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. It follows the reintroduction of border checks in Germany, Austria, France, Belgium and other countries in what’s supposed to be a passport-free travel zone spanning 26 nations. The moves are supposedly temporary, but are likely to be extended if Europe’s migrant crisis continues in 2016. “It’s basically every country for itself now,” said Mark Rhinard, an expert on the European Union at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs. Citing exceptional national circumstances related to security, terrorism and public order, several European countries have suspended EU rules that required them to keep their borders open to each other. It’s a significant development that strikes at the very heart of the EU project — the free movement of goods and people across borders. The Bruegel think tank in Brussels says that in 2014 there were almost 1.7 million cross-border commuters in the passport-free zone known as the Schengen Area, after the Luxembourg town where it was created in 1985. Abolishing it would affect their daily lives, but the consequences for Europe would go deeper, given the “visible and powerful symbol of European integration that Schengen represents,” Bruegel researchers Nuria Boot and Guntram Wolff wrote in December. Whether the temporary reintroduction of borders also means rebuilding mental boundaries between EU citizens remains to be seen. But the migrant crisis is becoming an even bigger challenge to European unity than the cracks emerging in recent years over the bloc’s common currency, the euro. EU nations demonstrated starkly different views on how to deal with the 1 million migrants that crossed the Mediterranean in 2015. Germany and Sweden, until recently, said refugees were welcome, while Hungary built a fence to keep them out. The Danish government took a series of measures to discourage migrants from going there, including a proposal to seize their jewelry to cover their expenses in Denmark. Common rules requiring refugees to seek shelter in the first EU country they enter collapsed, as Greece and Italy were overwhelmed by sea arrivals and countries further north just waved the migrants through to their intended destination, often Germany or the Scandinavian countries. Meanwhile the EU’s efforts to spread refugees more evenly across the bloc met stiff resistance from member states. By November only about 150 of 160,000 refugees had been relocated from Greece and Italy under an EU plan. The crisis underlines structural flaws in the EU, showing how it has implemented common rules that it just can’t enforce once the external pressures become too great, said Karl Lallerstedt, co-founder of Black Market Watch, a Switzerland-based non-profit group focusing on cross-border smuggling. “It’s not a strong federal state that can overrule its members,” he said. “At the same time individual states have obligations to the EU. So you’re in this sort of half-way house.” Any hope of a quick return to a borderless Europe was crushed by the deadly Paris attacks in November, after which France declared a state of emergency and beefed up border controls with neighboring countries. However, if bottlenecks build up at the borders, EU citizens and companies moving goods in trucks will eventually get fed up. Mexico mayor slain day after taking office MEXICO CITY (AP) — Three people, including a minor, were being held Sunday in the slaying of a newly inaugurated mayor in a gang-troubled central Mexican city. Morelos Gov. Graco Ramirez ordered flags on state buildings flown at half-mast and called for three days of mourning following the murder of Temixco Mayor Gisela Mota. He blamed organized crime for killing the 33-year-old Mota, a former federal congresswoman who had been sworn in as mayor less than a day before she was gunned down in her home Saturday morning. Ramirez ordered security measures for all of the state’s mayors, though he gave no details on what that involved. www.newstribune.com Ramon Castro Castro, Roman Catholic bishop of Cuernavaca, celebrated Mass at Mota’s home Sunday and later spoke critically of a state where some areas are in control of organized crime. “One theory could be that it was a warning to the other mayors,” Castro said to reporters. “If you don’t cooperate with organized crime, look at what will happen to you. It’s to scare them.” Following Mota’s killing, two suspects were killed in a clash with police and three others arrested. Officials said they include a 32-year-old woman, an 18-year-old man and the minor. They gave few other details, though state Attorney General Javier Perez Duron said they had been tied to other crimes. B NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 INSIDE SECTION B2 Faces B3 Opinion Prayer breakfast Thursday MIDMISSOURI Volunteer opportunities Capital City CASA (court-appointed special advocates) seeks volunteers to become advocates for abused and neglected children in the court system. Training is provided from professionals in the legal and welfare fields, and volunteers will have the support of CASA to help through each case. You must be 21 years of age and submit to a background check. For more information, contact executive director James Kellerman or executive assistant Tricia Kellerman at 690-9171. CLAIM is seeking volunteers in Mid-Missouri to assist Missourians with questions about Medicare coverage and options. CLAIM is funded by the federal government and the Missouri Department of Insurance. For more information, go to to www.missouriclaim.org or call 800-3903330, ext. 140. Not-for-profit groups that would like to be added to the database for periodic inclusion may contact Mary Fischer, editorial assistant, News Tribune Co., 210 Monroe St., Jefferson City, Mo., 65101, by telephone at 761-0240 or send an email to edasst@ newstribune.com. Football Hall of Famer turned pastor is featured speaker By Bob Watson bwatson@newstribune.com Michelle Brooks/News Tribune Tell us about your event or news! You can submit stories for News Tribune briefs by emailing them to nt@newstribune.com. If you prefer to submit items via hand delivery, email, fax or mail, call Mary Fischer at 761-0240 for assistance. COMINGEVENTS TODAY • Jefferson City Council, 6 p.m. • Taos Board, 6:30 p.m. • Block Party, 6:30 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. • Pizza and Pages, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. TUESDAY • Free Community Meal, 5-6 p.m., Holts Summit Civic Building. • Knitting, 6 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. • Unwind, Design, De-stress, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. WEDNESDAY • Jefferson City Writers’ Group, noon, Missouri River Regional Library. • Yoga, 5:30 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. • Village of Wardsville, 6:30 p.m. • The Life and Shoes of Charlston: Museum after Hours, 7 p.m., Missouri State Museum. • Ask the Writing Guru, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. THURSDAY • Yoga, 9 a.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. • Free Community Meal, 5-6 p.m., Holts Summit Civic Building. • Teens: Live Action Club, 6 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. FRIDAY • Chamber Membership Coffee, 7:308:30 a.m., 213 Adams St., 690-2720. SATURDAY • Lego Car Build, 2 p.m., Capital Mall, free. JAN. 11 • Millennial Mondays: Pop Culture Book Group, 6:30 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. • Current State of Policing, 7 p.m., Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 1021 Northeast Drive, with Doug Shoemaker, JCPD. JAN. 12 • Free Community Meal, 5-6 p.m., Holts Summit Civic Building. • Novel Ideas, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. Please see Events, p. 2 Post your event in this calendar and online at newstribune.com/go or by emailing the details to nt@newstribune.com. If you prefer to submit items via hand delivery, email, fax or mail, call Mary Fischer at 761-0240 for assistance. Halie Dampf is the first to serve as president of the new Student Leadership Team, which replaced the former student council, at Russellville High School. She is headed to the University of Missouri School of Journalism after graduation. Example for the future Halie Dampf leads growth in leadership at Russellville High By Michelle Brooks mbrooks@newstribune.com RUSSELLVILLE — With a little encouragement and a cheerful personality, a shy freshman from High Point bloomed into the student body president at Russellville High School. “I’ve always liked to help people,” Halie Dampf said. Serving in this capacity gives her purpose, she said. “Halie is a very fun, outgoing person to be around,” Student Leadership Team member Natalie Benne. “She knows when to have fun and when to be serious.” Even when she had her wisdom teeth pulled and sat the bench for a few volleyball games, Dampf cheered on everyone, Benne recalled. “She was a trooper,” Benne said. “It just goes to show how dedicated she was to the sport and our team.” Former English teachers Kate Lootens and Christina Hess have had a strong influence on Dampf, she said. “(Lootens) taught you to really open your mind to things you haven’t thought about before,” she said. “I And rather than five students from think that really changed me.” Now, she doesn’t know a stranger each class elected by popular vote on the first day of school, members of the and will talk to anyone, she said. “I want to make people feel wel- team must apply and interview for the position. come,” Dampf said, “It’s nice to work especially the new with mature stufreshmen. “Some dents who want to kids may have a bad be there,” Dampf day, if you say ‘hi’ Halie Dampf said it might make them Occupation: senior at RussellOne of the new feel better.” ville High School, waitress at the projects the team It was Hess who Jefferson City Country Club implemented was noticed her leaderPositions: President of Student Leadership Team, president of FFA the Teacher of the ship potential and Chapter, fundraising chairman of Month. Selected suggested she interNational Honor Society, volleyball teachers are recogview for the presiteam co-captain nized with a photo dent position. Community: Trinity Lutheran plaque in the main “It had not Church hall. crossed my mind The Student until she said something,” Dampf said. “I’m very glad she Leadership Team also has developed theme nights for each home basketdid.” This is the first year for the Student ball game. And Principal Chris Mitchell Leadership Team to be fully implemented, following the ideals of the asked the team to develop attendance Professional Learning Communities incentives. What they came up with adopted several years ago by faculty allows drivers with perfect attendance to leave campus early on Fridays. and administration in the district. As team president, she speaks at The team functions in the same assemblies and reads the morning way as student council. “It’s been more of a challenge, with announcements. She also spoke at freshmen orientation and as Mitchell new things to do,” Dampf said. Instead of occasional or as-need- has requested, like at the Veterans Day ed meetings of the council, the team Please see Dampf, p. 4 meets every two weeks. PORTRAIT A few spots remain for Thursday’s Governor’s Prayer Breakfast, where the Rev. Aeneas Williams will be the featured speaker. Beginning in 1991, when he was drafted by the Arizona Cardinals, Williams had a 14-year, Hall of Fame pro football career, including playing in a Super Bowl and eight Pro Bowls. He was selected “All-Pro” four times. He joined the St. Louis Rams in 2001. Williams was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 2, 2014. But off the field, he has devoted his life to sharing the wisdom and understanding of the Word of God, after making his personal commitment to be a Christian while a junior at Southern University. In 2007, Williams and his wife, Tracy Williams, founded The Spirit Church in St. Louis, and he serves as its senior pastor. The governor’s news release announcing Williams as the Prayer Breakfast speaker said he has “a love for people and a passion for helping each of us fulfill our full potential. … He is a beloved St. Louis community leader and role model whose tireless service, outreach and personal counsel have changed lives.” While still playing football, Williams “had chances to help some of his teammates through some of life’s rougher patches,” the news release reported, and “these opportunities led him to the realization that unhappiness doesn’t come from the things in our lives, rather it comes from things missing from our lives. Before entering the ministry, he wrote “It Takes Respect,” an inspirational insight into his passions, faith and leadership principles. The Prayer Breakfast, at 7:30 a.m. Thursday at the Capitol Plaza Hotel, is an annual interPlease see Williams, p. 4 Lessons never lost Local family shares mother’s legacy of service with WAVES in WWII By Jeremy P. Ämick news@newstribune.com Lying in her bed while in hospice care, Ruby “Ruth” Stephenson’s body may have become weakened by illness, but one can easily discern the bound in vigor that occurs when she describes the 14 months she served in the U.S. Navy during World War II — a brief moment of her past that not only allowed her to serve her country, but introduced her to a fellow sailor with whom she would share most of her life. Surrounded by her three children, Stephenson shared stories of the journey that led her to uniformed service, memories that were supplemented by recollections of her family. “Mom had a brother that died in infancy and she was raised as an only child,” said Elaine Cook, Stephenson’s daughter. “She was raised in Fayette and graduated from high school there.” For two years, Stephenson attended school at Central Methodist University until deciding it was time to “strike it on her own,” the veteran softly whispered. “The first time she applied (for the Navy), she was told that her eyesight was too poor,” said Romie Stephenson, the youngest of her two sons. “But they later relaxed the standards and she was able to join in 1943.” With a grin, Romie added, “She decided on the Navy because she thought they had the best-looking uniform.” The young recruit was soon on her way to become a member of the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) — an orga- nization established on July 30, 1942, to help fill positions left vacant stateside because of the scores of men deploying overseas to fight in World War II. Her first stop was at the Bronx campus of Hunter College in New York, the location that became the training base for all WAVES by 1943, and where she remained for the next several weeks to finish her boot camp and undergo medical training that would qualify her as a “Pharmacist’s Mate.” As Stephenson recalled, her first (and only) duty assignment was at a small medical facility at Camp Elliott in San Diego, California — a former Marine Corps and naval site where the first Navajo Code Talkers were trained. (A portion of the site is now situated on the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.) “She spent about a month working on one of the wards,” said Fred Stephenson, the oldest of her two sons. “Then,” he added, “she spent the rest of her time in the admissions and discharge office.” While at Camp Elliott, her family shared, the young WAVES member met Frederick Stephenson Sr. — the man with whom she would fall in love and marry on April 21, 1944. “Dad had been in the Navy since the late 1930s and was at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked,” said his daughter, Elaine. “After he and mother were married, she became pregnant and had to leave the Navy because at that time women couldn’t be in the service and pregnant.” Receiving her discharge in October 1944, Stephenson returned to Mid-Missouri, giving birth to her first child, Elaine. A few months later she moved back to California to wait for her husband to finish out his enlistment. “In California, mom lived in an apartment across the hall from Phyllis Diller — this was back before she became a famous comedian,” said her son, Fred. “They became good friends, and Phyllis would babysit Elaine when mom had to go run errands and mom would watch Phyllis’s brood www.newstribune.com Courtesy of Elaine Cook Ruth Stephenson enlisted in the Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service (WAVES) in 1943. She would meet her husband, Fred, while the two were serving at Camp Elliott, Calif., during World War II. whenever she needed to go do something.” When Stephenson’s husband was discharged from the Navy on Feb. 10, 1947, the family returned to Fayette, where their second child, Fred Jr., was born months later. “Dad worked for a while at a grocery store in Fayette but wanted to become a professional Please see Stephenson, p. 4 POLICE REPORTS MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 NEWS TRIBUNE B2 Saturday calls for service Thefts were reported in the 3500 block of Missouri Boulevard, and two in the 700 block of East High Street, Domestic violence was reported in the 2300 block of West Main Street. FACES Kile Brewer/News Tribune A little Runge music LEFT: Madison Berendzen dances along to the music of River Ridge String Band Wednesday with her grandmother Mary Ann Burns and sister Riley Berendzen, at Runge Nature Center. ABOVE: John Cunning tunes his banjo between sets. BELOW: Harper Hentges, 4, looks to Cunning for guidance while performing a guest shaker part. SHERIFF REPORTS Saturday calls for service Thefts were reported in the 3900 block of Dewberry Drive and 3500 block of Missouri Boulevard. Domestic violence was reported in the 5100 block of West Business 50. Assaults were reported in the 2100 block of Osage Second Street and 5100 block of West Business 50. An accident with property damage was reported at the intersection of North Missouri 179 and Rt. N and South Missouri 179 and West Edgewood Drive. An animal bite was reported in the 7600 block of Wheat Lane. Events: Continued from p. 1 JAN. 13 Kile Brewer/News Tribune • Taste of Jefferson City, 4:30-6:30 p.m., Capitol Plaza Hotel, 638-3590. • Yoga, 5:30 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. Making his point Fulton-based professional storyteller Larry Brown tells a tale of a coyote who wanted to learn the song of a dove Tuesday afternoon at Runge Nature Center during Runge’s Holiday Happenings event series. JAN. 14 Kile Brewer/News Tribune Activities during holiday break Participants in Cole County 4-H’s Clover Kids Camp build birdhouses with the help of 4-H volunteers Tuesday morning at the Cole County Extension Center. The annual camp, which is in its sixth year, gives kids something to do over Christmas break in the time between Christmas and New Years. • Yoga, 9 a.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. • Free Community Meal, 5-6 p.m., Holts Summit Civic Building. • Teen Table Top Gaming Club, 5:30 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library. • “My Way: Sinatra’s Life and Music” dinner theater, Capital City Players, 6:30 p.m., Shikles Auditorium, 681-9012. • Become a Goodreads Power User, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library, free. • “Wonder of the World,” 7:30 p.m., Scene One Theatre, 121 E. High St., 635-6713. JAN. 15 • Alzheimer’s lunch/ dinner, Eagles Club; lunch 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; dinner, 4:30-7 p.m. deliveries of five or more at 636-2440. • “My Way: Sinatra’s Life and Music” dinner theater, Capital City Players, 6:30 p.m., Shikles Auditorium, 681-9012. • Ask the Writing Guru, 7 p.m., Missouri River Regional Library,. • “Wonder of the World,” 7:30 p.m., Scene One Theatre, 121 E. High St., 635-6713. JAN. 16 • Cole Relay for Life Bowling, 1 p.m., Westgate Lanes, sign up at lanes. • “My Way: Sinatra’s Life and Music” dinner theater, Capital City Players, 6:30 p.m., Shikles Auditorium, 681-9012. • “Wonder of the World,” 7:30 p.m., Scene One Theatre, 121 E. High St., 635-6713. JAN. 17 • “My Way: Sinatra’s Life and Music” dinner theater, Capital City Players, 12:30 p.m., Shikles Auditorium, 681-9012. Leah Beane/News Tribune Kile Brewer/News Tribune New year, new baby Obstetrics Nurse Crystal Schollmeyer swaddles the newborn Carsen Kelly during a New Year’s Day shift at Capital Region Medical Center. Just checking Officer Shawn Dumsday of the Jefferson City Police Department talks with a driver after pulling them over along U.S. 50 Thursday night. Dumsday, who has lost close friends in his life to drunk driving accidents, had a personal goal for the evening of getting the last DUI arrest of 2015 and the first of 2016. www.newstribune.com JAN. 19 • JC Council, 6 p.m., City Hall. • Centertown Board, 6:30 p.m. NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Walter E. Hussman Jr., Publisher Terri Leifeste, President and General Manager Richard F. McGonegal, Opinion Page Editor Gary Castor, Managing Editor A family owned and operated independent newspaper Hear the word of the Lord ye children of Israel for the Lord hath a controversy with the inhabitants of the land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land. Hosea 4: 1 MISSOURIVIEW Time to pass Marketplace Fairness Act VIEWPOINT Muzzling the watchdogs St. Joseph News-Press Boosters of our local communities must be starting to wonder. How difficult will their funding problems become before Congress offers help in the form of tax fairness? Nationally, analysts report sales at physical stores were down just shy of 6 percent in the month and half ending Dec. 15, and traffic in stores was down about 8 percent compared to a year ago. While the trends might be better in our region, this is a continuation of a shift in consumer behavior. It is no surprise to anyone who has found that, as the years march on, they increasingly are inclined to supplement their preparations for the holiday by shopping online. Rather than try to turn back that clock, smart local retailers are adjusting by enhancing the services they offer, ensuring their stores are inviting to shoppers and matching online values. But in doing all this, they daily must confront a fundamental unfairness. Online sales are not taxed consistently. In too many instances, it falls to the individual consumer rather than the retailer to report the tax obligation and submit the appropriate tax payment. When was the last time someone in your household paid the required “use tax” for online purchases? This lack of a level playing field for local retailers also is having an enormous, and growing, negative impact on states that do not efficiently collect sales taxes on online purchases. And, in turn, it harms local communities that rely on gradual increases in sales tax funding to provide needed services, including streets, schools and public safety. Consumers who do pay sales tax are treated unfairly in this system, as are retailers, local governments and — ultimately — each of us and our families. This trend will cause local tax revenues to stagnate; fewer local jobs will be created or supported by retail businesses; and pressure will increase for new tax hikes on local residents to make up the shortfall due to lost tax collections. This doesn’t have to end this way, but avoiding this fate requires help. Congress has a fix called the Marketplace Fairness Act. This proposal, which cleared the U.S. Senate in 2013, would enable all states and local governments to collect sales taxes from big online retailers in exchange for steps to simplify tax laws nationwide. Past leaders in the U.S. House have pledged to pass and forward this bill to the president’s desk, but we’re still waiting and the problem is only growing worse. __________ This lack of a level playing field for local retailers also is having an enormous, and growing, negative impact on states that do not efficiently collect sales taxes on online purchases. And, in turn, it harms local communities that rely on gradual increases in sales tax funding to provide needed services, including streets, schools and public safety. B3 The Los Angeles Times COMMENTARY Before government became reviled WASHINGTON — Soon, voters will have the opportu- those eligible in New Jersey voted. No one will ever call nity and impertinence to insert themselves into the 2016 2016 part of an Era of Good Feelings. If, however, Donald presidential conversation that thus far has been the pre- Trump’s vitriol pumps up the number of voters, this will at occupation of journalists and other abnormal people. The least lay to rest the canard that high voter turnout is a sign voting will begin in Iowa, thanks to Marie Jahn. of social health. When, after 38 years as recorder for Plymouth Given the pandemic distaste for today’s polCounty in northwest Iowa, Jahn decided to retire itics, it is consoling to remember that things in February 1975, local Democrats decided to change. In the late 19th century, Robert Ingerthrow her a party. When it came to attracting a soll, aka “The Great Agnostic,” was the nation’s speaker, the best they could entice from their most outspoken atheist and a leading Republiparty’s national ranks was a former one-term can, a combination unlikely today. In the third governor of Georgia. According to Steven Haydecade of the 20th century, even a politician with ward in “The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old national aspirations could be proudly parochial: Liberal Order”: The Democrats’ 1928 presidential nominee, New “Carter’s obscurity was confirmed when York Gov. Al Smith, reportedly said he would he appeared on the syndicated TV game show rather be a lamppost on Park Row than the govGeorge Will ‘What’s My Line?’ He stumped the panel, which ernor of California, and when asked his thoughts not only didn’t recognize him, but failed to guess about the problems of states west of the Mishe was a state governor. When pollster George Gallup drew sissippi, he supposedly replied, “What are the states west up a list of 38 potential Democratic presidential candidates of the Mississippi?” In 1952, the Democratic presidential in 1975, Carter’s name was not on the list.” nominee, Adlai Stevenson, dismayed by the mainstream Eleven months after the fete for Jahn, Jimmy Carter media’s conservatism, fretted about “a one-party press in a finished second in the hitherto obscure Iowa caucus- two-party country.” es, behind “undecided.” This semi-triumph became his Today, there is a sense in which there are few two-party springboard to Olympus. The caucuses would never again states. In the presidential election 40 years ago, Carter be obscure. The moral of this cautionary tale is that voters against President Gerald Ford, 20 states were won by five can be startlingly disruptive. points or less, including the six most populous states: CaliPerhaps they are somewhat less likely to be so today. fornia, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, Illinois, Ohio. (Note Surprises might be more difficult to spring now that there is the absence of Florida, now the third-most populous state.) saturation journalism about In 2012, just four states were presidential campaigns that decided by five points or are in high gear a year before Given the pandemic distaste for today’s less (North Carolina, Florithe first votes are cast. politics, it is consoling to remember da, Ohio, Virginia). Today, But American politics J. Sabato, Kyle Kondik that things change. In the late 19th Larry often has had quirky aspects, and Geoffrey Skelley of the century, Robert Ingersoll, aka “The University of Virginia’s Cenas historian Morton Keller demonstrates in his “Amer- Great Agnostic,” was the nation’s most ter for Politics identify just ica’s Three Regimes: A New seven states they consider Political History” (2007). outspoken atheist and a leading Repub- “super-swingy”: Colorado, The Republican Party, Keller lican, a combination unlikely today. Florida, Nevada, Ohio and says, became known as Virginia, all of which voted the Grand Old Party in the for George W. Bush and 1880s, when it was about 25 years young. In 1840, when Barack Obama twice, and Iowa and New Hampshire, which William Henry Harrison, scion of wealthy Virginia planters, have voted Democratic in three of the last four elections. ran for president as the hardscrabble “log cabin and hard But, again, things change. “One session of the Concider candidate,” the resulting paraphernalia included necticut Legislature in the 1790s,” Keller writes, “devoted glass log cabins containing whiskey from Pittsburgh’s E.C. itself primarily to imposing a tax on dogs. The next session Booz distillery, which enriched American slang. The Era was given over to discussing whether or not to remove that of Good Feelings, the decade after 1815, was, Keller says, levy.” This was, of course, long ago, before government more an Era of No Feelings: In the 1820 presidential elec- became ambitious, caring and reviled. tion, Richmond’s 12,000 residents produced 17 votes. Only Email: 568 of Baltimore’s 63,000 residents voted. Nine percent of georgewill@washpost.com www.newstribune.com Since Congress created the first inspectors general for federal agencies in 1978, these in-house watchdogs have proved their worth again and again. Inspectors general have investigated the CIA’s inhumane “enhanced interrogation methods,” revealed abuses in the FBI’s acquisition of telephone and other records, and documented the selective enforcement by the Internal Revenue Service of regulations governing political spending by tax-exempt groups. Given the nature of their mission, it is not terribly surprising to learn from inspectors general for several federal agencies that their work is being hampered by the unwillingness of the officials they monitor to provide some necessary information — despite the fact that the Inspector General Act requires that inspectors general have access to “all records, reports, audits, reviews, documents, papers, recommendations or other material” necessary to do their job. The Justice Department has come under particular — and deserved — criticism for stymieing the work of its inspector general. Beginning in 2010, FBI lawyers argued that some records couldn’t be shared because of protections in federal law. In July, the department’s Office of Legal Counsel concluded that the inspector general could be denied access to some information in three categories: the contents of wiretaps, grand jury proceedings and credit information. The author of that opinion, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Karl R. Thompson, concluded that the Inspector General Act’s requirement that inspectors general have access to “all records” must be qualified in light of the provisions of the federal Wiretap Act, the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and Section 626 of the Fair Credit Reporting Act. His opinion said that the department could provide the inspector general with information protected by these laws for “many, but not all” of its investigations. That isn’t good enough for Michael E. Horowitz, the department’s inspector general, who said that without greater access “our office’s ability to conduct its work will be significantly impaired.” But the problem isn’t confined to the Justice Department. In a letter to congressional leaders, the council representing inspectors general from throughout the government warned that the Office of Legal Counsel’s opinion “represents a potentially serious challenge to the authority of every inspector general and our collective ability to conduct our work thoroughly, independently and in a timely manner.” In fairness to the Justice Department, laws must be read in conjunction with others. And, legal interpretation aside, it’s important to protect the privacy of personal information, including financial records and the products of electronic surveillance, which can capture private conversations of innocent people. But in such sensitive situations, information can be provided to inspectors general with the understanding that it will be redacted in any public report. A Justice Department spokeswoman said that the department would support legislation to clarify Congress’ intent. Fortunately, there is a bipartisan effort in Congress to make it clear that, irrespective of other laws, inspectors general are entitled to “all records” necessary for them to perform their vital function. Enacting such a law must be a priority when Congress returns to work. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. B4 MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 FROM PAGE ONE/MIDWEST Illinois, Missouri assess damage, cleanup KINCAID, Ill. (AP) — The Mississippi River and many of its tributaries continued their retreat Sunday from historic and deadly winter flooding, leaving amid the silt a massive cleanup and recovery effort likely to take weeks if not months. The flood, fueled by more than 10 inches of rain over a three-day period that began Christmas Day, is blamed for 25 deaths in Illinois and Missouri, reflecting Sunday’s discovery of the body of a second teenager who drowned in central Illinois’ Christian County. The Mississippi River was receding except in the far southern tip of both states. The Meramec River, the St. Louis-area tributary of the Mississippi that caused so much damage last week, already was below flood stage in the hardhit Missouri towns of Pacific and Eureka and dropping elsewhere. But worries surfaced anew Sunday along the still-rising Illinois River north of St. Louis, where crests near the west-central Illinois towns of Valley City, Meredosia, Beardstown and Havana were to approach records before receding in coming days. In Kincaid, a 1,400-resident central Illinois town near the Sangamon River’s south fork, Gov. Bruce Rauner toured flood-damaged homes Sunday as Sharon Stivers and other residents piled ruined furniture, appliances and clothes along the street for disposal crews to pick up. Mike Crews, Christian County’s emergency manager, said the worst of the inundation appeared to be past, “until the new weather comes,” citing the prospect of potentially heavy rain later in the week. Stivers shares a home with her Dampf: Continued from p. 1 Assembly. The greatest change this year may be with Homecoming. In the past, the student council would be involved with a few things. Now, the team will be in charge of everything, Dampf said. They’ll organize the Homecoming Olympics games and materials, select the daily dressup themes, and construct the royalty stage backdrop. “It takes more planning than it looks like,” Dampf said. So far, the Student Leadership Team has proven more organized than student councils of the past, Benne said. Williams: Continued from p. 1 faith event for all leaders and citizens of Missouri. Its purpose is to seek God’s guidance for the state’s governmental leaders at the beginning of the legislative session, and — in addition to Williams’ remarks — it will feature prayers and scripture readings. This year’s special music will be provided by Jefferson City High School’s Chorale. Although hosted by the governor, the annual Prayer Breakfast is administered by a not-forprofit organization and is not an official government function. Its proceeds support the Governor’s Student Leadership Stephenson: Continued from p. 1 photographer,” said Elaine. “We moved to Houston (Texas) in early 1949 so that he could enroll in the University of Houston’s photography program.” The couple and their growing family spent the next few years living in housing in Memorial Park dedicated to WWII veterans attending college. While there, the couple welcomed their third and final child, Romie, in 1953. “Our dad graduated with his photography degree and worked a few years for Susan’s of Hollywood (in Texas),” said Fred. “He then worked for Southwest Industrial Electronics and stayed with them until his retirement in the early 1970s, after he became partially disabled from a stroke.” Fred added, “Mother was a homemaker for several years and later worked for Sears. She retired from there in 1984.” After the passing of their father in 2001, Stephenson relocated to Moberly, where she has resided until her recent transfer to the hospice care unit at a local hospital. Reflecting on 45-year-old daughter battling breast cancer, along with a granddaughter and four dogs. Floodwaters got 4 feet into their home, located in an area where flood insurance wasn’t available. “Am I mad?” she asked. “I lost my home. My daughter has cancer and lost her home. Am I mad? When I’m not crying I am.” Across the street, Theresa Gibson was getting help from relatives and friends clearing out what they could salvage after the flood reached 18 inches into her home, buckling newly finished oak floors and saturating walls. “This is just horrible,” Gibson, 50, lamented, noting how the fast-rising waters had allowed her only enough time to fill a couple of suitcases. “We’ve had floods before, but nothing like this.” In Illinois’ Morgan County, home to the 1,000-resident village of Meredosia, locals were keeping wary eyes on levies fortified with 50,000 sandbags. As of midday Sunday at Meredosia, the Illinois was more than 10 feet above flood stage and pressing toward an expected crest Tuesday roughly a half-foot short of the record set in July. While optimistic those levies would hold, Jacksonville-Morgan County Emergency Management Director Phil McCarty said the prospect of flooding during the chill of winter carried dangerous health risks, including hypothermia. President Barack Obama signed a federal emergency declaration Saturday for Missouri, allowing federal aid to be used to help state and local response efforts. It also allows the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster “One of the things I love about Halie is that she has always made it a point to hear everyone’s opinion before a group decision is made,” Benne said. Dampf said her leadership style is more of a laidback approach, letting other people take the lead in various aspects of a project. “It’s cool to help other leaders grow,” she said. “I know my limits; if I can’t handle something, I will ask someone else to be in charge.” As the last half of her senior year closed, Dampf said she realized she would not be around in the next school year. “But, we’re part of something that’s really going to work,” she said. “We’ve tried to set a precedent for future years.” Forum on Faith and Values, which brings together select Missouri college students from public and private universities for a three-day study of faith and leadership. Participants explore the role that faith has played in the lives of business executives, sports figures and government officials. Missouri’s Governor’s Prayer Breakfast was established in the 1950s as an extension of the National Prayer Breakfast, which was first held in 1953. Tickets are $35 per seat, and may be purchased online at www.missourigpb.com. The event also has a Facebook page. Seating begins at 7:10 a.m. The event is expected to be finished about 9 a.m. the stories they have heard their mother share throughout the years, the veteran’s children are proud of their mother’s service and continue to find pleasure in helping to share her experiences. “I personally feel that they aren’t accurately teaching the history of World War II any more,” said Romie, “and people need to understand the sacrifices that others — such as my mother and father — have endured for them.” His older brother, Fred, added, “And it’s not just about those who fought in the war, but they should also learn about how the entire country was united and everyone on the home front gave something, too … through sacrifices such as rationing.” Pausing, he concluded, “These are stories that need to be preserved and shared so that these lessons are never lost.” Ruth Stephenson passed away on Dec. 22, 2015, and was laid to rest with her husband in the Houston (Texas) National Cemetery. Jeremy P. Ämick writes on behalf of the Silver Star Families of America. Residents pile ruined furniture, appliances and clothes along the street for disposal crews to pick up after last week’s flooding from the south fork of the Sangamon River in Kincaid, Ill. AP relief efforts. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon had asked for the help. In Illinois’ St. Clair County just east of St. Louis, emergency management director Herb Simmons said damage assessment began Sunday after the Mississippi started to fall. Though water reached higher than 1993, this flood wasn’t as bad, Simmons said. “In ‘93 that water came up and stayed on the levees for several months,” Simmons said. “This flood came up quick and went down quick.” St. Louis-area cleanup largely was focused around the Meramec. Two waste- water treatment plants were so damaged by the floodwaters that raw sewage spewed into the river. Hundreds of people were evacuated in the Missouri communities of Pacific, Eureka, Valley Park and Arnold, where many homes took in water. In southeast Missouri, up to 30 homes and several businesses were damaged in Cape Girardeau, a community of nearly 40,000 residents that is mostly protected by a flood wall. The Mississippi peaked at 48.9 feet Friday night, four-tenths of a foot above the 1993 record, but short of the 50-foot mark projected. Nearby levee breaks in other places kept the crest down. Amtrak service between St. Louis and Kansas City was back in business on Sunday, four days after high water that reached the tracks at some locations forced the passenger service to be halted. Moderate Mississippi River flooding was expected in Memphis, Tennessee. The National Weather Service issued a flood advisory for the Cumberland River at Dover, Tennessee, through Monday evening. Minor flooding along the Ohio River was affecting the Kentucky cities of Owensboro and Paducah, and the crest wasn’t expected until Thursday. Rescued dog becomes rescuer for veteran with PTSD SPRINGDALE, Ark. (AP) — For Justin Six, the nightmares started after Kosovo. “We were doing a maneuver and I was about to shoot an 8-year-old. That and working the mine fields,” said Six, a soldier living in Springdale, Arkansas, with post-traumatic stress disorder. Ever since his deployment, the 35-year-old has lived an isolated life, the Springfield News-Leader (http://sgfnow.co/1JHmMRS ) reported. But lately he’s been crawling out of the darkness with help from Maggie, a puppy he adopted who is training to be his service dog. “Me and her just get along. I’m very antisocial and Maggie gets me out of the house. She gives me companionship when my wife is at work,” he said. When Justin’s nightmares start, Maggie wakes him up by jostling his hands or waking up his wife. She’s attuned to his emotions. “If it wasn’t for her, I don’t think he’d still be here,” said Justin’s wife, Brandi. “The depression was so bad, I was scared to leave him alone . Within a month of getting her, I started to see a change in him.” Maggie has been a blessing in more ways than one, and this little pup’s life started in Springfield, Missouri. First came the rescue In February, EMT driver Sarah Shoemaker and her partner parked their ambulance near a downtown bridge in Springfield while they waited for calls. It was there that Shoemaker spotted Maggie and her three siblings living under a bridge near the railroad tracks. “They were skinny and nasty looking,” Shoemaker said. She brought them dog food and fed them. A few nights later the temperature plummeted. Shoemaker was afraid the stray pups would die. She called her supervisor and asked for permission to transport the animals to her house. When the partners searched for the dogs, they only found three. She doesn’t know if the fourth had been rescued or had died, but she took the litter home. “I came in at midnight and my husband said, ‘What’s that?’ I said ‘I couldn’t let them die,’” she said. This wasn’t her first animal rescue. The next day, she called Haven of the Ozarks, a no-kill shelter in Washburn, Missouri, which is near Cassville. There was a two-week waiting list to get the animals in, so Shoemaker and her husband dewormed the dogs and kept them until the shelter could take them. Shoemaker said she wanted to keep Maggie because it was her favorite pup, but Shoemaker’s husband reminded her they already had three dogs, so off Maggie went. AP/Springfield News-Leader Justin Six pets his service dog Maggie while at his home in Springdale Ark. Six, an Army veteran, suffers from PTSD. He says that Maggie will wake him up in the middle of the night when he is having nightmares and also helps him with his anxiety. Rescued becomes rescuer Haven of the Ozarks was founded in 1995 in Shell Knob, but moved to its current location in Washburn in 1998, said Jennifer Silverberg, treasurer. It can house 150 dogs and 60 cats a month. “We are a no-kill shelter so we may have a dog for 10 years. Luckily with social media, those cases don’t happen as much anymore,” said Silverberg. It is funded completely by donations and fundraisers. Every month, the nonprofit has mobile adoptions in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Maggie went in March. It’s rare for Justin Six to leave the house because crowds make him anxious and he has a fear of people walking up behind him, but that afternoon Justin and Brandi were headed to Barnes & Noble. Petco was nearby, which is where Haven of the Ozarks had set up its mobile adoption. “I said, ‘Let’s stop’ and his exact words were, ‘We’re not getting a dog,’” chuckled Brandi. His connection with Maggie was instant. “I took her for a walk and that was it,” Justin said. Within a month, Brandi noticed he had less anxiety in public. “I noticed he seemed a lot happier. It’s almost like she’s got his back,” Brandi said. Maggie gets Justin out of the house more as he takes her for walks. He describes her as a “lovable” dog who is goofy and brings him comfort. Soon after they adopted her, they had her evaluated to see if she would make a good service dog. Among other things, service dogs can’t startle easily, need to focus and must ignore other dogs. www.newstribune.com Maggie passed. She is training through a new organization- so new it hasn’t officially launched and is waiting for its nonprofit status approval — Service Dogs of Distinction. The organization services northwest Arkansas and Little Rock. Marsha Wyatt is one of the founders and is training Maggie. She has worked with animals for 25 years and says she continues to be amazed at the transformational powers animals have on humans. “PTSD service dogs offer support for the veteran who often suffers social anxiety, depression, agoraphobia and is reclusive. The dogs offer unconditional love, are available 24/7, provide unwavering commitment and are their combat comrades. Soldiers are so connected to fellow soldiers and miss that bond and support terribly after war,” Wyatt said. Wyatt has watched Justin come out of his shell and has seen some of his anxiety ease since she’s been working with him. Wyatt meets with Maggie and Justin and then it’s Justin’s responsibility to follow up and do “homework” or training with Maggie throughout the week. Justin was diagnosed with PTSD in 2013. The VA’s National Center for PTSD does not recognize service dogs as a treatment for PTSD, saying there is not enough evidence to prove the animals help. But Justin Six and Wyatt have no doubt and would love to see more veterans get a service dog. There are so many soldiers suffering, said Wyatt. “With the rate of veterans committing suicide, we need help. There is not enough recognition or help for these soldiers,” Wyatt said. After Maggie settled into her new life, Brandi sent a private Facebook message to staff at the Haven to let them know what a difference this dog had made in the Sixes’ lives. Silverberg read the message and asked if Brandi would be willing to share her story because there was a national competition for shelters to earn a grant from Petco in exchange for real life stories from families who had adopted animals. “With those national things, you never think you’re going to win but it doesn’t hurt to try. It was two days before the deadline, so I told her I understood it was last minute if she didn’t want to do it,” Silverberg said. There were more than 3,000 entries nationwide. But Brandi posted her story and Haven of the Ozarks won a $5,000 grant from Petco, which will be applied to its operating costs. “That money was needed. Lately we’ve had more dogs with health problems and dental problems and $5,000 doesn’t even cover one month of vet bills,” said Silverberg. Because the nonprofit is located in rural Missouri, they have a hard time recruiting and maintaining volunteers. “We joke that no one knows where we are unless they want to dump a dog,” Silverberg said. Some people shy away from volunteering because they think it’s depressing, but Silverberg, who lives in Springfield and drives more than an hour to volunteer at the shelter, says it is a happy place. Outside of a real home, it’s the next best thing for these animals. The animals they take in are strays or abandoned. It’s not unusual to hear from a family who has had a successful adoption, said Silverberg, “but this is a great story. I am so happy for them.” NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 1 VS. 2? C Tonight’s matchup between Kansas and Oklahoma could have some extra intrigue. INSIDE SECTION C2 Statistics C5 NFL C6 Tournaments ■ BASKETBALL C4 Perfect 10 Done deal Chiefs’ Hunt expects NFL team to play in L.A. next season KANSAS CITY (AP) — Chiefs owner Clark Hunt expects at least one NFL franchise to be play in Los Angeles next season, though he declined to speculate Sunday whether the Raiders, Chargers or Rams are the leading candidate. The three are expected to file for relocation today, the day after the regular season ends. Hunt is part of a six-man committee made up of league owners that will meet to discuss relocation plans. The rest of the league’s owners will meet to review their findings the following week, and could decide whether one or two teams will move to Los Angeles for the 2016 season. The nation’s second-largest market hasn’t had an NFL team since the Raiders and Rams left after the 1994 season. The Chargers have played in San Diego for 55 seasons. “There’s still a lot of information we need to look at,” Hunt said shortly before his playoff-bound Chiefs played Oakland in a regular-season finale. “We suspect the Raiders will be one of those teams, and we have to consider opportunities that have been put forward by the markets in Oakland, St. Louis and San Diego for their teams to stay. We’ll go through all that this week.” A task force formed by Missouri’s governor made its formal pitch earlier in the week, sending a nearly 400-page prospectus to the NFL offices. At its centerpiece is a $1.1-billion stadium along the Missouri River, not far from the city’s iconic Gateway Arch. But making things sticky for St. Louis is the fact Rams owner Stan Kroenke is part of a group planning a $1.8-billion stadium in Inglewood, Calif. The Chargers and Raiders have teamed up on a joint venture for a stadium a short distance away in Carson, Calif. Also sending their pitch this week were San Diego mayor Kevin Falconer and county commissioner Ron Roberts, who hope to build a $1.1-billion facility to replace Qualcomm Stadium. The Chargers have sought a new home since 2008, three years after their stadium was expanded to accommodate Super Bowls. Oakland city officials repeatedly have said they won’t weigh down taxpayers with a new stadium, especially considering the city and county are still in debt from renovations 20 years ago. All three franchises have close links to Hunt and the Chiefs. St. Louis is the cross-state rival that only occasionally plays the Chiefs during the regular season, but has become common preseason opponents. The Raiders and Chargers are two of Kansas City’s oldest rivals, part of the original AFL founded by Hunt’s father, the late Lamar Hunt. “Obviously we’ve had a tremendous rivalry with the Raiders going back 55, 56 years,” said Clark Hunt, now the team’s chairman and CEO. “I hope we can continue to have that rivalry in the future.” Hunt said his preference is always for NFL teams to stay where they are, but he acknowledged Sunday the business side of things appears to be making relocation inevitable. “All three of those franchises have tremendous fan bases in their home markets,” he said. “In an ideal world, I’d like to see them all stay where they are. It probably won’t work out that way. There will probably be at least one team moving to L.A. I can’t speculate who that might be.” Kansas City extends winning streak AP Chiefs tight end Demetrius Harris makes a touchdown catch as Raiders linebacker Malcolm Smith and safety Charles Woodson look on during Sunday’s game in Kansas City. Same old story Rams post another losing season SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — The St. Louis Rams were on a roll, having stayed in the Northern California wine country town of Napa between West Coast games poised to close the season on a four-game winning streak and avoid a losing record. Dontae Johnson blocked that plan. Johnson swatted Greg Zuerlein’s 48-yard field goal attempt in overtime and San Francisco rallied to win on Phil Dawson’s 23-yard field goal shortly after, lifting the 49ers to a 19-16 victory Sunday that wasn’t enough to save the job of head coach Jim Tomsula. Please see Rams, p. 3 AP Rams wide receiver Brian Quick (83) can’t catch a pass while being defended by 49ers safety Eric Reid during Sunday’s game in Santa Clara, Calif. A mystery Relieved of duty Browns fire coach, general manager CLEVELAND (AP) — The Browns changed uniforms to start the season and their coach and general manager to end it. Hours after a 28-12 loss to the rival Pittsburgh Steelers in the season finale, owner Jimmy Haslam fired coach Mike Pettine and general manager Ray Farmer following their second straight losing season in charge. It’s almost a tradition. Pettine went 10-22 in two years, dropping 18 of his final 21 games after a promising 7-4 start in 2014. Pettine’s job security had been in doubt for months, and not even Haslam’s vow at the start of training camp not to “blow things up” could stop another regime change in Cleveland. Pettine was the team’s seventh full-time coach since 1999, and the team has changed coaches and GMs five times since 2008. “We greatly appreciate Ray’s and Mike’s dedication and hard work while with the Cleveland Browns,” said Haslam, who owns the team along with his wife, Dee. “We’ve made this decision because we don’t believe our football team was positioned KANSAS CITY (AP) — Alex Smith looked down at his phone in the middle of the Chiefs’ locker room, moments after leading his team to its franchise-record 10th straight victory. “Just checking messages,” he said with a grin. Not checking scores. Turns out, Smith already knew that Denver had knocked off San Diego to deny Kansas City the AFC West title. But with their 23-17 victory against the Oakland Raiders on Sunday, the Chiefs managed to keep their unprecedented roll going into their playoff opener in Houston next weekend. “This week it would have been easy, clinch last week on that emotional high, to have a lull,” said Smith, who threw two TD passes against the Raiders. “We still came out and played good football.” And did so without running back Jamaal Charles, out for the season with a knee injury, and linebacker Justin Houston, still sidelined by an injured knee. The Chiefs (11-5) have managed to win 10 straight on the heels of a fivegame losing streak that at one point put their season on the brink. Please see Chiefs, p. 3 well for the future. We are all disappointed with where we are and we take full responsibility. We will approach the search for our next football coach and executives to lead our football operations with a clear vision regarding what we need to do to build a successful organization. “We will be methodical in looking for strong, smart leaders with high character who are relentlessly driven to improve our football team, willing to look at every resource possible to improve, and who embrace collaboration to ultimately make the best decisions for the Cleveland Browns. We are fully committed to bringing our fans the winning organization they so clearly deserve.” A former defensive coordinator, Pettine’s ouster can be partly linked to the performance of his defense, which ranked at or near the bottom in the league in nearly every statistical category. Pettine is the fifth Cleveland coach in eight years to lose his job following a season-ending loss to the Steelers. Haslam said the team will immediately begin a search for its eighth full-time coach of the expansion era. The Browns have hired a consulting firm to assist Please see Browns, p. 3 Browns not commenting on report of Manziel trip to Vegas AP Mike Pettine walks off the field after the Browns’ loss to the Steelers on Sunday in Cleveland. www.newstribune.com CLEVELAND (AP) — Johnny Manziel’s weekend itinerary remains a mystery. The Browns are not commenting on a report that their polarizing quarterback, who sustained a concussion last week in Kansas City, went to Las Vegas on Saturday as his teammates got ready for their season finale. Manziel was not going to play Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers because he’s in the NFL’s protocol on head injuries. Manziel got hurt while rushing for 108 yards in a loss to the Chiefs. USA Today quoted an employee and patron who said they saw Manziel at Las Vegas’ Planet Hollywood on Saturday. The report said he ate at a restaurant in the casino and sat down at a blackjack table. It’s not clear if the team has a policy prohibiting players from traveling when they are out with an injury. Typically, players who have concussions are sensitive to noise, light and are encouraged to rest as they recover. The Browns do not require concussed players to be at the stadium for home games. Manziel was not seen at FirstEnergy Stadium in the hours leading up to kickoff against the Steelers. He posted a photo on his Twitter account on Saturday night of him lying on the floor with his dog. He used the hashtag #SaturdayNights. Manziel has had a second turbulent season with Cleveland. The 2012 Hesiman Trophy winner started six games, and while he did show progress on the field, the 23-year continued to be a distraction off it. Manziel spent 10 weeks in a rehab facility last Please see Manziel, p. 3 C2 SPORTS CALENDAR NEWS TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Today National Football League y-New England N.Y. Jets Buffalo Miami W 12 10 8 6 L 4 6 8 10 y-Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Tennessee W 9 8 5 3 L 7 8 11 13 y-Cincinnati x-Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland W 12 10 5 3 L 4 6 11 13 y-Denver x-Kansas City Oakland San Diego W 12 11 7 4 L 4 5 9 12 y-Washington Philadelphia N.Y. Giants Dallas W 9 7 6 4 L 7 9 10 12 y-Carolina Atlanta New Orleans Tampa Bay W 15 8 7 6 L 1 8 9 10 y-Minnesota x-Green Bay Detroit Chicago W 11 10 7 6 L 5 6 9 10 W y-Arizona 13 x-Seattle 10 St. Louis 7 San Francisco 5 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division L 3 6 9 11 AMERICAN CONFERENCE East T Pct PF PA Home 0 .750 465 315 7-1-0 0 .625 387 314 6-2-0 0 .500 379 359 5-3-0 0 .375 310 389 3-5-0 South T Pct PF PA Home 0 .563 339 313 5-3-0 0 .500 333 408 4-4-0 0 .313 376 448 4-4-0 0 .188 299 423 1-7-0 North T Pct PF PA Home 0 .750 419 279 6-2-0 0 .625 423 319 6-2-0 0 .313 328 401 3-5-0 0 .188 278 432 2-6-0 West T Pct PF PA Home 0 .750 355 296 6-2-0 0 .688 405 287 6-2-0 0 .438 359 399 3-5-0 0 .250 320 398 3-5-0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East T Pct PF PA Home 0 .563 388 379 6-2-0 0 .438 377 430 3-5-0 0 .375 420 442 3-5-0 0 .250 275 374 1-7-0 South T Pct PF PA Home 0 .938 500 308 8-0-0 0 .500 339 345 4-4-0 0 .438 408 476 4-4-0 0 .375 342 417 3-5-0 North T Pct PF PA Home 0 .688 365 302 6-2-0 0 .625 368 323 5-3-0 0 .438 358 400 4-4-0 0 .375 335 397 1-7-0 West T Pct PF PA Home 0 .813 489 313 6-2-0 0 .625 423 277 5-3-0 0 .438 280 330 5-3-0 0 .313 238 387 4-4-0 Sunday’s Games Houston 30, Jacksonville 6 Washington 34, Dallas 23 Detroit 24, Chicago 20 Buffalo 22, N.Y. Jets 17 Miami 20, New England 10 New Orleans 20, Atlanta 17 Cincinnati 24, Baltimore 16 Pittsburgh 28, Cleveland 12 NFL Playoff Schedule Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City (11-5) at Houston (9-7), 3:35 p.m. (KMIZ/ESPN) Pittsburgh (10-6) at Cincinnati (12-4), 7:15 p.m. (KRCG) Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle (10-6) at Minnesota (11-6), noon (KOMU) Green Bay (10-6) at Washington (9-7), 3:30 p.m. (KQFX) Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 Cincinnati, Houston or Kansas City at New England (12-4), 3:30 (KRCG) Minnesota, Washington or Green Bay at Arizona (13-3), 7:15 p.m. (KOMU) Sunday, Jan. 17 Seattle, Green Bay or Washington at Carolina (151), 12:05 p.m. (KQFX) Pittsburgh, Kansas City or Houston at Denver (124), 3:30 p.m. (KRCG) Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 NFC, TBA AFC, TBA Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin, 7 p.m. (ESPN) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. TBD, 5:30 p.m. (KRCG) College Football Bowl Results, Schedule Saturday, Dec. 19 Celebration Bowl, Atlanta NC A&T 41, Alcorn State 34 New Mexico Bowl, Albuquerque Arizona 45, New Mexico 37 Las Vegas Bowl Utah 35, BYU 28 Camellia Bowl, Montgomery, Ala. Appalachian State 31, Ohio 29 Cure Bowl, Orlando, Fla. San Jose State 27, Georgia State 16 New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Tech 47, Arkansas State 28 ——— Monday, Dec. 21 Miami Beach Bowl Western Kentucky 45, South Florida 35 ——— Tuesday, Dec. 22 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Boise Akron 23, Utah State 21 Boca Raton (Fla.) Bowl Toledo 32, Temple 17 ——— Wednesday, Dec. 23 Poinsettia Bowl, San Diego Boise State 55, Northern Illinois 7 GoDaddy Bowl, Mobile, Ala. Georgia Southern 58, Bowling Green 27 ——— Thursday, Dec. 24 Bahamas Bowl, Nassau Western Michigan 45, Middle Tennessee 31 Hawaii Bowl, Honolulu San Diego State 42, Cincinnati 7 ——— Saturday, Dec. 26 St. Petersburg (Fla.) Bowl Marshall 16, Connecticut 10 Sun Bowl, El Paso, Texas Washington State 20, Miami (Fla.) 14 Heart of Dallas Bowl Washington 44, Southern Mississippi 31 Pinstripe Bowl, Bronx, N.Y. Duke 44, Indiana 41, OT Independence Bowl, Shreveport, La. Virginia Tech 55, Tulsa 52 Foster Farms Bowl, Santa Clara, Calif. Nebraska 37, UCLA 29 Away 5-3-0 4-4-0 3-5-0 3-5-0 Columbus AFC 9-3-0 7-5-0 7-5-0 4-8-0 NFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 Div 4-2-0 3-3-0 4-2-0 1-5-0 Away AFC 4-4-0 7-5-0 4-4-0 6-6-0 1-7-0 5-7-0 2-6-0 1-11-0 NFC 2-2-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 2-2-0 Div 5-1-0 4-2-0 2-4-0 1-5-0 Away AFC 6-2-0 9-3-0 4-4-0 7-5-0 2-6-0 4-8-0 1-7-0 2-10-0 NFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 1-3-0 Div 5-1-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 1-5-0 Away AFC 6-2-0 8-4-0 5-3-0 10-2-0 4-4-0 7-5-0 1-7-0 3-9-0 NFC 4-0-0 1-3-0 0-4-0 1-3-0 Div 4-2-0 5-1-0 3-3-0 0-6-0 Away 3-5-0 4-4-0 3-5-0 3-5-0 NFC 8-4-0 4-8-0 4-8-0 3-9-0 AFC 1-3-0 3-1-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 Div 4-2-0 3-3-0 2-4-0 3-3-0 Away NFC 7-1-0 11-1-0 4-4-0 5-7-0 3-5-0 5-7-0 3-5-0 5-7-0 AFC 4-0-0 3-1-0 2-2-0 1-3-0 Div 5-1-0 1-5-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 Away 5-3-0 5-3-0 3-5-0 5-3-0 NFC 8-4-0 7-5-0 6-6-0 3-9-0 AFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 3-1-0 Div 5-1-0 3-3-0 3-3-0 1-5-0 Away NFC 7-1-0 10-2-0 5-3-0 7-5-0 2-6-0 6-6-0 1-7-0 4-8-0 AFC 3-1-0 3-1-0 1-3-0 1-3-0 Div 4-2-0 3-3-0 4-2-0 1-5-0 Indianapolis 30, Tennessee 24 Philadelphia 35, N.Y. Giants 30 San Francisco 19, St. Louis 16, OT Denver 27, San Diego 20 Seattle 36, Arizona 6 Kansas City 23, Oakland 17 Carolina 38, Tampa Bay 10 Minnesota 20, Green Bay 13 End of regular season League Leaders ——— Monday, Dec. 28 Military Bowl, Annapolis, Md. Navy 44, Pittsburgh 28 Quick Lane Bowl, Detroit Minnesota 21, Central Michigan 14 ——— Tuesday, Dec. 29 Armed Forces Bowl, Fort Worth, Texas California 55, Air Force 36 Russell Athletic Bowl, Orlando, Fla. Baylor 49, North Carolina 38 Arizona Bowl, Tucson Nevada 28, Colorado State 23 Texas Bowl, Houston LSU 56, Texas Tech 27 ——— Wednesday, Dec. 30 Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl Auburn 31, Memphis 10 Belk Bowl, Charlotte, N.C. Mississippi St. 51, NC State 28 Music City Bowl, Nashville, Tenn. Louisville 27, Texas A&M 21 Holiday Bowl, San Diego Wisconsin 23, Southern Cal 21 ——— Thursday, Dec. 31 Peach Bowl, Atlanta Houston 38, Florida State 24 Orange Bowl (Playoff Semifinal) Miami Gardens, Fla. Clemson 37, Oklahoma 17 Cotton Bowl Classic (Playoff Semifinal) Arlington, Texas Alabama 38, Michigan State 0 ——— Friday, Jan. 1 Outback Bowl, Tampa, Fla. Tennessee 45, Northwestern 6 Citrus Bowl, Orlando, Fla. Michigan 41, Florida 7 Fiesta Bowl, Glendale, Ariz. Ohio State 44, Notre Dame 28 Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif. Stanford 45, Iowa 16 Sugar Bowl, New Orleans Mississippi 48, Oklahoma State 20 ——— Saturday, Jan. 2 TaxSlayer Bowl, Jacksonville, Fla. Georgia 24, Penn State 17 Liberty Bowl, Memphis, Tenn. Arkansas 45, Kansas State 23 Alamo Bowl, San Antonio TCU 47, Oregon 41, 3OT Cactus Bowl, Phoenix West Virginia 43, Arizona State 42 ——— Monday, Jan. 11 College Football Championship Game Glendale, Ariz. Clemson (14-0) vs. Alabama (13-1), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts Florida 39 23 12 4 50 Montreal 40 22 15 3 47 Detroit 39 19 13 7 45 Boston 37 20 13 4 44 Tampa Bay 39 19 16 4 42 Ottawa 39 18 15 6 42 Toronto 37 15 15 7 37 Buffalo 39 15 20 4 34 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts Washington 38 28 7 3 59 N.Y. Islanders 40 22 13 5 49 N.Y. Rangers 39 21 14 4 46 New Jersey 39 20 14 5 45 Pittsburgh 38 19 15 4 42 Carolina 39 16 17 6 38 Philadelphia 37 15 15 7 37 40 15 22 3 33 103 127 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 41 28 9 4 60 144 107 Chicago 40 23 13 4 50 111 97 St. Louis 41 23 14 4 50 101 100 Minnesota 38 20 11 7 47 101 90 Nashville 39 19 13 7 45 103 102 Colorado 39 18 18 3 39 109 110 Winnipeg 38 18 18 2 38 103 110 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Los Angeles 38 25 11 2 52 104 83 Arizona 38 18 16 4 40 107 122 Vancouver 39 15 15 9 39 95 110 San Jose 37 18 17 2 38 101 106 Calgary 38 18 18 2 38 101 121 Anaheim 37 15 15 7 37 69 89 Edmonton 40 16 21 3 35 101 122 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday’s Games Toronto 4, St. Louis 1 Edmonton 4, Arizona 3, SO Tampa Bay 3, Minnesota 2, SO Columbus 5, Washington 4, SO Detroit 4, Buffalo 3 Los Angeles 2, Philadelphia 1 Florida 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 New Jersey 3, Dallas 2, OT Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 2 Nashville 2, Carolina 1, OT Calgary 4, Colorado 0 Winnipeg 4, San Jose 1 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Islanders 6, Dallas 5 Florida 2, Minnesota 1 Chicago 3, Ottawa 0 Winnipeg at Anaheim, (n) Today’s Games Ottawa at St. Louis, 7 p.m. Detroit at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 8 p.m. Carolina at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Arizona at Vancouver, 9 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Washington at Boston, 6 p.m. Florida at Buffalo, 6 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m. Chicago at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Columbus, 6 p.m. Montreal at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. Winnipeg at Nashville, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Calgary, 8 p.m. GF GA 106 85 116 99 100 106 116 102 100 95 111 118 99 103 91 105 GF GA 121 83 113 99 112 103 93 94 91 93 92 110 79 102 Through games of Saturday, January 2, 2016 Goals Name Team GP G Jamie Benn Dallas 40 24 Patrick Kane Chicago 39 23 Tyler Seguin Dallas 40 23 Vladimir Tarasenko St Louis 39 23 Alex Ovechkin Washington 37 21 Joe Pavelski San Jose 37 20 Mike Hoffman Ottawa 34 18 Evgeni Malkin Pittsburgh 38 18 Tyler Toffoli Los Angeles 38 18 Matt Duchene Colorado 39 17 Johnny Gaudreau Calgary 38 17 Kyle Palmieri New Jersey 39 17 Brent Burns San Jose 37 16 Taylor Hall Edmonton 40 16 Max Pacioretty Montreal 40 16 Brandon Saad Columbus 39 16 Daniel Sedin Vancouver 39 16 Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay 39 16 Mats Zuccarello NY Rangers 39 16 Scott Hartnell Columbus 39 15 Leo Komarov Toronto 37 15 Brad Marchand Boston 34 15 James Neal Nashville 39 15 Ryan O’Reilly Buffalo 39 15 Patrick Sharp Dallas 40 15 Jeff Skinner Carolina 39 15 John Tavares NY Islanders 36 15 ——— Assists Name Team GP A Patrick Kane Chicago 39 33 Erik Karlsson Ottawa 38 32 John Klingberg Dallas 40 30 Blake Wheeler Winnipeg 38 29 Jamie Benn Dallas 40 28 Tyler Seguin Dallas 40 27 P.K. Subban Montreal 40 26 Taylor Hall Edmonton 40 25 Henrik Sedin Vancouver 37 24 Nicklas Backstrom Washington 35 23 Leon Draisaitl Edmonton 30 23 Evgeny Kuznetsov Washington 38 23 Artemi Panarin Chicago 39 23 Johnny Gaudreau Calgary 38 22 David Krejci Boston 35 22 Tomas Plekanec Montreal 40 22 Bobby Ryan Ottawa 37 22 Alexander Steen St Louis 41 22 Henrik Zetterberg Detroit 39 22 Patrice Bergeron Boston 37 21 Mike Cammalleri New Jersey 38 21 John Carlson Washington 34 21 Jonathan Huberdeau Florida 38 21 Mikko Koivu Minnesota 37 21 Mathieu Perreault Winnipeg 38 21 Mike Ribeiro Nashville 39 21 Daniel Sedin Vancouver 39 21 Mark Stone Ottawa 36 21 Jakub Voracek Philadelphia 37 21 ——— Power Play Goals Name Team GP PP Justin Faulk Carolina 39 12 Patrick Kane Chicago 39 12 Jamie Benn Dallas 40 10 Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay 39 9 Evgeni Malkin Pittsburgh 38 8 Vladimir Tarasenko St Louis 39 8 Shea Weber Nashville 39 8 Patrice Bergeron Boston 37 7 Loui Eriksson Boston 37 7 Alex Ovechkin Washington 37 7 Shane Doan Arizona 29 6 Drew Doughty Los Angeles 38 6 Scott Hartnell Columbus 39 6 Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay 39 6 Ryan O’Reilly Buffalo 39 6 Kyle Palmieri New Jersey 39 6 Joe Pavelski San Jose 37 6 Corey Perry Anaheim 37 6 Tyler Toffoli Los Angeles 38 6 ——— Short Handed Goals Name Team GP SH Jean-Gabriel Pagea Ottawa 38 4 Paul Byron Montreal 28 3 Brad Marchand Boston 34 3 Artem Anisimov Chicago 39 2 Jamie Benn Dallas 40 2 Jason Chimera Washington 38 2 Blake Comeau Colorado 39 2 Cody Eakin Dallas 40 2 Eric Fehr Pittsburgh 28 2 Adam Henrique New Jersey 37 2 Bryan Little Winnipeg 38 2 Zack Smith Jonathan Toews Blake Wheeler Mika Zibanejad Ottawa Chicago Winnipeg Ottawa ——— Power Play Assists Name Team Erik Karlsson Ottawa Nicklas Backstrom Washington Brent Burns San Jose John Klingberg Dallas Kris Letang Pittsburgh Alexander Steen St Louis P.K. Subban Montreal Jakub Voracek Philadelphia Henrik Zetterberg Detroit Patrice Bergeron Boston Kevin Shattenkirk St Louis Mikkel Boedker Arizona John Carlson Washington Filip Forsberg Nashville Ryan Johansen Columbus Roman Josi Nashville Niklas Kronwall Detroit Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay Joe Pavelski San Jose Victor Rask Carolina Tyler Seguin Dallas ——— Short Handed Assists Name Team Jeff Petry Montreal Jamie Benn Dallas Patrice Bergeron Boston Zdeno Chara Boston Vernon Fiddler Dallas Curtis Lazar Ottawa Torrey Mitchell Montreal Jared Spurgeon Minnesota Drew Stafford Winnipeg Blake Wheeler Winnipeg Aleksander Barkov Florida Francois Beauchemi Colorado Pierre-Edouard Bel Philadelphia Jordie Benn Dallas T.J. Brodie Calgary J.T. Brown Tampa Bay Alex Burmistrov Winnipeg Paul Byron Montreal John Carlson Washington Jeff Carter Los Angeles Cal Clutterbuck NY Islanders Andrew Cogliano Anaheim Sean Couturier Philadelphia Charlie Coyle Minnesota Tommy Cross Boston Matt Cullen Pittsburgh Cody Eakin Dallas Mattias Ekholm Nashville Loui Eriksson Boston Mike Fisher Nashville Brian Flynn Montreal Justin Fontaine Minnesota Paul Gaustad Nashville Tom Gilbert Montreal Zemgus Girgensons Buffalo Claude Giroux Philadelphia Barclay Goodrow San Jose Markus Granlund Calgary Victor Hedman Tampa Bay Matt Hendricks Edmonton Shawn Horcoff Anaheim Erik Johnson Colorado Jacob Josefson New Jersey Duncan Keith Chicago Alex Killorn Tampa Bay Anze Kopitar Los Angeles Gabriel Landeskog Colorado Adam Larsson New Jersey Kris Letang Pittsburgh Ben Lovejoy Pittsburgh Olli Maatta Pittsburgh Derek MacKenzie Florida Brad Marchand Boston Alec Martinez Los Angeles Shawn Matthias Toronto Adam Pardy Winnipeg Pekka Rinne Nashville Antoine Roussel Dallas Miikka Salomaki Nashville David Savard Columbus Luca Sbisa Vancouver Marco Scandella Minnesota Rob Scuderi PIT-CHI Daniel Sedin Vancouver Andrej Sekera Edmonton Kevin Shattenkirk St Louis Reilly Smith Florida Carl Soderberg Colorado Mark Stone Ottawa Clayton Stoner Anaheim Brian Strait NY Islanders Mark Stuart Winnipeg Teuvo Teravainen Chicago Jonathan Toews Chicago Jacob Trouba Winnipeg Kyle Turris Ottawa Marc-Edouard Vlasi San Jose 34 Justin Williams Washington Tom Wilson Washington Tommy Wingels San Jose Travis Zajac New Jersey Jason Zucker Minnesota ——— Power Play Points Name Team Patrick Kane Chicago Patrice Bergeron Boston Brent Burns San Jose Nikita Kucherov Tampa Bay Evgeni Malkin Pittsburgh Joe Pavelski San Jose Nicklas Backstrom Washington Justin Faulk Carolina Roman Josi Nashville Erik Karlsson Ottawa Steven Stamkos Tampa Bay Shea Weber Nashville Jamie Benn Dallas John Klingberg Dallas Ryan O’Reilly Buffalo Tyler Seguin Dallas Patrick Sharp Dallas Kevin Shattenkirk St Louis Alexander Steen St Louis NBA 37 39 38 37 2 2 2 2 GP 38 35 37 40 29 41 40 37 39 37 31 38 34 39 37 39 39 39 37 39 40 PPA 14 13 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 GP 38 40 37 35 40 33 29 37 38 38 28 39 29 39 29 35 38 28 34 34 38 37 31 37 3 38 40 39 37 28 40 22 30 36 35 37 14 17 38 30 36 39 36 29 38 38 35 39 29 38 32 34 34 38 36 10 33 38 21 34 18 30 32 39 39 31 38 39 36 32 24 38 35 39 38 38 1 38 38 37 31 37 SHA 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 GP 39 37 37 39 38 37 35 39 39 38 39 39 40 40 39 40 40 31 41 PPP 21 18 17 16 16 16 15 15 15 15 15 15 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Toronto 21 14 .600 Boston 18 15 .545 New York 16 19 .457 Brooklyn 10 23 .303 Philadelphia 3 33 .083 Southeast Division W L Pct Miami 20 13 .606 Atlanta 21 14 .600 Orlando 19 15 .559 Charlotte 17 16 .515 Washington 15 17 .469 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 22 9 .710 Chicago 20 12 .625 Indiana 19 14 .576 www.newstribune.com 1 1 1 1 1 GB — 2 5 10 18½ GB — — 1½ 3 4½ GB — 2½ 4 Detroit Milwaukee 18 16 .529 14 21 .400 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 29 6 .829 Dallas 19 15 .559 Memphis 18 17 .514 Houston 16 19 .457 New Orleans 11 22 .333 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 24 10 .706 Utah 15 17 .469 Portland 15 21 .417 Minnesota 12 22 .353 Denver 12 23 .343 Pacific Division W L Pct Golden State 31 2 .939 L.A. Clippers 22 13 .629 Sacramento 13 20 .394 Phoenix 12 25 .324 L.A. Lakers 8 27 .229 Saturday’s Games Brooklyn 100, Boston 97 Sacramento 142, Phoenix 119 Indiana 94, Detroit 82 Oklahoma City 109, Charlotte 90 Cleveland 104, Orlando 79 Milwaukee 95, Minnesota 85 San Antonio 121, Houston 103 New Orleans 105, Dallas 98 Utah 92, Memphis 87, OT Golden State 111, Denver 108, OT L.A. Clippers 130, Philadelphia 99 Sunday’s Games Chicago 115, Toronto 113 New York 111, Atlanta 97 Miami 97, Washington 75 Portland 112, Denver 106 L.A. Lakers 97, Phoenix 77 Today’s Games Toronto at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Indiana at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Boston at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Orlando at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. San Antonio at Milwaukee, 7 p.m. Sacramento at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Houston at Utah, 8 p.m. Memphis at Portland, 10 p.m. Charlotte at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee at Chicago, 8 p.m. New York at Atlanta, 8 p.m. Sacramento at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Golden State at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. 5½ 10 GB — 9½ 11 13 17 GB -8 10 12 12½ GB -10 18 21 24 College Basketball Sunday’s Games EAST Colgate 56, American U. 37 George Washington 69, Fordham 63 UMass 74, La Salle 67 Vermont 65, Harvard 62 SOUTH FIU 76, FAU 59 Louisville 65, Wake Forest 57 Marshall 94, W. Kentucky 76 Princeton 89, Hampton 59 UAB 78, Middle Tennessee 67 MIDWEST Illinois St. 67, Drake 62 Minn.-Morris 91, St. Scholastica 75 N. Dakota St. 75, Denver 49 Nebraska-Omaha 76, IUPUI 71 Ohio St. 75, Illinois 73 S. Dakota St. 63, W. Illinois 59 Wichita St. 85, Bradley 58 SOUTHWEST UTEP 84, North Texas 75 UTSA 85, Rice 80 FAR WEST Arizona 94, Arizona St. 82 California 71, Utah 58 Grand Canyon 74, Bethune-Cookman 53 Oregon St. 70, Oregon 57 Washington 87, Southern Cal 85 Transactions BASKETBALL NBA Development League RIO GRANDE VALLEY VIPERS — Acquired G Matt Carlino from the available player pool. FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELAND BROWNS — Fired general manager Ray Farmer and coach Mike Pettine. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Released OT Reid Fragel from the practice squad. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Placed WR Rishard Matthews on injured reserve. Signed LB Mike Hull from the practice squad. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Signed RB Toben Opurum from the practice squad. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Placed NT Bennie Logan on injured reserve. Signed CB Randall Evans from the practice squad. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Fired coach Jim Tomsula. Placed LB Michael Wilhoite on injured reserve. HOCKEY National Hockey League CAROLINA HURRICANES — Recalled F Brock McGinn from Charlotte (AHL). CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Acquired F Richard Panik from Toronto for F Jeremy Morin. Loaned D David Rundblad to ZSC Lions (National League A-Switzerland). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Assigned F Jonathan Drouin to Syracuse (AHL). American Hockey League AHL — Suspended Torontto LW Richard Clune one game. BAKERSFIELD CONDORS — Assigned G Ty Rimmer to Norfolk (ECHL). LAKE ERIE MONSTERS — Recalled F Peter Quenneville from Cincinnati (ECHL). TORONTO MARLIES — Assigned G Rob Madore to Orlando (ECHL). ECHL ECHL — Suspended Tulsa F Mathieu Gagnon eight games, Rapid City D Garrett Clarke and D Jonathan Narbonne five games, Tulsa G Kevin Carr three games and Tulsa F Emerson Clark one game. IDAHO STEELHEADS — Released G Will Gagnon as emergency backup. INDY FUEL — Signed F Adam Lapsansky. NORFOLK ADMIRALS — Released G Adam Courchaine. ORLANDO SOLAR BEARS — Released G Bobby Fowler as emergency backup. WHEELING NAILERS — Signed F Massimo Lamacchia. COLLEGE GEORGIA — Named James Coley wide receivers coach, Dell McGee running backs coach and Marshall Malchow recruiting director. N.C. STATE — Fired offensive coordinator Matt Canada. NOTRE DAME — Announced WR Will Fuller and RB C.J. Prosise will enter the NFL draft. SOUTH CAROLINA — Announced G Shay Colley has left the women’s basketball team. Women’s Basketball Lincoln at Washburn, 5:30 p.m. Missouri vs. Tennessee, 6 p.m. (SEC Network) Girls Basketball Blair Oaks vs. Warsaw in Tri-County Tourney at Eldon, 6 p.m. Lady Jays vs. Waynesville, 6:30 p.m. Helias vs. Camdenton, 7:30 p.m. Men’s Basketball Lincoln at Washburn, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Girls Basketball Calvary vs. Vienna, 6 p.m. Helias at Sedalia S-C, 7:30 p.m. Boys Basketball Helias at C.B.C., 6:30 p.m. Blair Oaks vs. Hallsville in Tri-County Tourney at Eldon, 7:30 p.m. Calvary vs. Vienna, 7:30 p.m. Prep Wrestling Helias vs. Rock Bridge, 7 p.m. Wednesday Prep Wrestling Blair Oaks vs. Priory, 5 p.m. Jays vs. Rolla, 7 p.m. Men’s Basketball Missouri at Georgia, 6 p.m. Eclipse Lakers rout Suns LOS ANGELES (AP) — Lou Williams scored a season-high 30 points and the Los Angeles Lakers sent Phoenix to its ninth straight loss with a 97-77 rout of the cold-shooting Suns on Sunday night. The Lakers, coming off victories against Boston and Philadelphia, have won three in a row for the first time since Feb. 22-27 against Boston, Utah and Milwaukee. Rookie Larry Nance Jr. had 15 points and tied a season high with his second straight 14-rebound game. Kobe Bryant sat out his second straight game because of a sore right shoulder, the same one he had surgery on last January to repair a torn rotator cuff. SPORTSTV -----6:00 SECN Women’s College Basketball Tennessee at Missouri. ESPN Men’s College Basketball North Carolina at Florida State. ESPN2 Men’s College Basketball West Virginia at TCU. -----6:30 NBAN NBA Basketball Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat. -----7:00 FXSP NHL Hockey Ottawa Senators at St. Louis Blues. BTN Women’s College Basketball Rutgers at Iowa. -----8:00 ESPN Men’s College Basketball Oklahoma at Kansas. ESPN2 Men’s College Basketball Virginia at Virginia Tech. ESPNU Men’s College Basketball Alcorn State at Texas Southern. NBCSN NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at Colorado Avalanche. -----9:00 NBAN/FXSP+ NBA Basketball Memphis Grizzlies at Portland Trail Blazers. NFL MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Chiefs 23, Raiders 17 Oakland Kansas City AP Rams tackle Garrett Reynolds (71) celebrates after running back Tre Mason (bottom center) scored a touchdown in Sunday’s game with the 49ers in Santa Clara, Calif. 49ers 19, Rams 16 St. Louis San Francisco 3 13 0 0 0 — 16 0 10 3 3 3 — 19 First Quarter StL—FG Zuerlein 33, 8:11. Drive: 6 plays, 72 yards, 2:15. Key Plays: Keenum 54 pass to Britt; Austin 13 run. St. Louis 3, San Francisco 0. Second Quarter SF—Boldin 33 pass from Gabbert (Dawson kick), 14:52. Drive: 7 plays, 70 yards, 3:27. Key Play: Gabbert 31 pass to Harris on 3rd-and-12. San Francisco 7, St. Louis 3. SF—FG Dawson 26, 9:03. Drive: 7 plays, 55 yards, 2:16. Key Plays: Gained possession on downs at San Francisco 37; Harris 47 run on 3rd-and-3. San Francisco 10, St. Louis 3. StL—FG Zuerlein 32, 2:43. Drive: 12 plays, 66 yards, 6:20. Key Plays: M.Brown 13 run; Keenum 12 pass to Quick; Keenum 11 pass to Welker; Brooks 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty. San Francisco 10, St. Louis 6. StL—Mason 4 run (Zuerlein kick), 1:31. Drive: 2 plays, 3 yards, 0:16. Key Play: Sims 42 interception return to San Francisco 3. St. Louis 13, San Francisco 10. StL—FG Zuerlein 44, :04. Drive: 4 plays, 40 yards, 0:25. Key Play: Cunningham 40 run. St. Louis 16, San Francisco 10. Third Quarter SF—FG Dawson 28, 9:37. Drive: 12 plays, 70 yards, 5:23. Key Plays: Gabbert 11 pass to McDonald on 3rd-and-10; Gabbert 44 pass to Ellington; Gabbert 3 pass to Harris on 3rd-and-1. St. Louis 16, San Francisco 13. Fourth Quarter SF—FG Dawson 38, 4:28. Drive: 12 plays, 60 yards, 5:53. Key Plays: Gabbert 31 pass to Smith on 3rd-and-10; Gabbert 21 pass to Harris; Harris 3 run on 3rd-and-2. St. Louis 16, San Francisco 16. Overtime SF—FG Dawson 23, 3:27. Drive: 5 plays, 69 yards, 1:22. Key Plays: Ward blocked field goal recovery; Hayes 15-yard roughing the passer penalty; Gabbert 15 pass to Smith; Gabbert 33 pass to Patton. San Francisco 19, St. Louis 16. A—70,799. Time—3:25. ——— StL SF FIRST DOWNS 21 21 Rushing 9 5 Passing 11 13 Penalty 1 3 THIRD DOWN EFF 3-13 8-18 FOURTH DOWN EFF 0-1 0-1 TOTAL NET YARDS 364 458 Total Plays 71 78 Avg Gain 5.1 5.9 NET YARDS RUSHING 133 108 Rushes 33 33 Avg per rush 4.0 3.3 NET YARDS PASSING 231 350 Sacked-Yds lost 0-0 1-4 Gross-Yds passing 231 354 Completed-Att. 22-38 28-44 Had Intercepted 0 1 Yards-Pass Play 6.1 7.8 KICKOFFS-EndZone-TB 6-4-3 5-4-2 PUNTS-Avg. 5-51.8 5-39.0 Punts blocked 0 0 FGs-PATs blocked 1-0 0-0 TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE 101 65 Punt Returns 2-6 0-0 Kickoff Returns 3-53 3-65 Interceptions 1-42 0-0 PENALTIES-Yds 11-105 7-60 FUMBLES-Lost 1-0 2-0 TIME OF POSSESSION 38:30 33:03 ——— INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—St. Louis, Mason 18-44, Cunningham 4-38, Austin 6-32, M.Brown 4-17, Keenum 1-2. San Francisco, Harris 16-67, M.Davis 10-34, Gabbert 7-7. PASSING—St. Louis, Keenum 22-37-0-231, Hekker 0-1-0-0. San Francisco, Gabbert 28-44-1-354. RECEIVING—St. Louis, Kendricks 5-37, Austin 5-30, Britt 3-81, Cunningham 3-34, Quick 2-23, Welker 2-16, Harkey 1-12, M.Brown 1-(minus 2). San Francisco, Harris 8-86, Boldin 5-71, Smith 5-61, McDonald 3-37, M.Davis 2-15, Miller 2-2, Ellington 1-44, Patton 1-33, Bell 1-5. PUNT RETURNS—St. Louis, Austin 2-6. San Francisco, None. KICKOFF RETURNS—St. Louis, Cunningham 2-44, C.Reynolds 1-9. San Francisco, Ellington 2-63, Patton 1-2. TACKLES-ASSISTS-SACKS—St. Louis, Johnson 10-0-0, Alexander 7-0-0, Joyner 6-1-0, Jenkins 6-0-0, Barron 5-3-0, McLeod 5-1-0, Hayes 5-0-0, Ayers 2-1-0, Donald 2-0-0, Sims 2-0-0, Westbrooks 1-1-0, Long 1-0-1, Brockers 1-0-0, Harkey 1-0-0, Laurinaitis 1-0-0, Longacre 1-0-0, Roberson 1-0-0, Zuerlein 1-0-0. San Francisco, Hodges Jr. 12-1-0, Ward 9-1-0, Bowman 9-0-0, Johnson 6-1-0, Harold 3-1-0, Reaser 3-1-0, Purcell 3-0-0, Miller 2-0-0, Carradine 1-2-0, Jerod-Eddie 1-1-0, Lynch 1-1-0, Reid 1-1-0, Acker 1-0-0, Armstead 1-0-0, Armstrong 1-0-0, Brock 1-0-0, Brooks 1-0-0, Cromartie 1-0-0, M.Davis 1-0-0, Williams 1-0-0, Bellore 0-1-0, Hayne 0-1-0. INTERCEPTIONS—St. Louis, Sims 1-42. MISSED FIELD GOALS—St. Louis, Zuerlein 52 (WR), 48 (BK). Rams: Fall short of goal Continued from p. 1 Rams coach Jeff Fisher finished 7-9 for his fourth straight losing season running the team and called it “very disappointing.” “We had numerous opportunities earlier in the year to win games, and we didn’t get it done,” he said. “I’m all right with being 4-2 in the division. I’m not all right with some of the other losses.” Now, the Rams will wait to learn what their future holds. The biggest question facing the franchise: Will the Rams relocate to Los Angeles for the 2016 season? “Until we know what’s going on, there’s no reason to discuss it,” Fisher said. “You just wait it out and see what happens. I’ve been through this before.” After Zuerlein’s miss, San Francisco the ball back with 4:49 to play in OT and the reliable Dawson delivered. Zuerlein also saw a 52-yarder sail wide right with 1:13 left in the third. “Any time you don’t go up and convert and do your job, you’re not going to be happy about it,” he said. “Just because of the situation, I don’t think it makes it any more or less significant.” Case Keenum went 22-of-37 for 231 yards as St. Louis had its three-game winning streak snapped with the Rams trying for four consecutive victories for the first time since seven straight in 2003. “It really wasn’t about getting to 8-8,” defensive end Chris Long said. “Our goal this season was bigger than 8-8.” Free-agent-to-be Dawson — who turns 41 later this month and wants to play an 18th season — also kicked a tying 38-yard field goal with 4:33 remaining in regulation. St. Louis punted on its next possession. Then, after left guard Andrew Tiller’s false start, Anquan Boldin caught a 27-yard pass with quarterback Blaine Gabbert under pressure late in the game, but San Francisco ended up punting from the 37 with 1:39 left. The Rams are left to ponder what went wrong, especially during a five-game skid after beating the Niners 27-6 on Nov. 1 before the recent three-game winning streak. “We wanted to finish out the season at .500 with this group of guys, so it was a big disappointment,” defensive end Eugene Sims said. “I’ve felt all season like we were a playoff team, but just had some bad bounces that put us in some bad situations.” Before Dawson came through with his foot, reigning NBA MVP Stephen Curry of the champion Golden State Warriors drew the biggest cheers of the day when shown on the big screen in the third quarter. He obliged with a wave and a smile. Boldin knocked down cornerback Janoris Jenkins on his 33-yard TD catch 8 seconds into the second quarter. Dawson kicked a 26-yard field goal in the second quarter and a 28-yarder in the third. After seeing what happened to Zuerlein moments earlier in OT, Dawson wasn’t counting on anything coming easily. “I’m sure people were thinking, ‘Oh, it’s just a no-brainer,’ but I’m trotting out there thinking, ‘I’ve missed one shorter than this, we’ve given up a couple blocks this year,’” Dawson said. “You know they’re going to be bringing the heat. It’s not a gimme.” Gabbert passed for 354 yards and a 33-yard touchdown to Anquan Boldin for the 49ers (5-11), who avoided their worst finish since going 4-12 in 2005. Late in the second quarter, Gabbert had a pass tipped by Aaron Donald and Sims made the interception and returned it 42 yards. Tre Mason ran for a 4-yard score two plays later. Then in the waning minutes with a chance for a go-ahead touchdown on third-and-goal, Gabbert made an errant pitch backward to DuJuan Harris for a 12-yard loss before Harris pounced on the ball. The Rams struggled without rookie running back Todd Gurley, sidelined with a foot injury. Mason carried 18 times for 44 yards and the Rams were held scoreless after halftime. “Heartbreakers like that are tough,” Keenum said. “It’s the last game of the season, it leaves a bad taste in your mouth. And now we’re going to have that taste in our mouth the rest of the (year).” Notes: Rams LB Daren Bates suffered a knee injury. … St. Louis TE Lance Kendricks caught a pass all five times he was targeted. AP Dontae Johnson of the 49ers blocks a field-goal attempt by the Rams’ Greg Zuerlein during overtime of Sunday’s game in Santa Clara, Calif. 0 10 0 7 — 17 14 0 9 0 — 23 First Quarter KC—Maclin 25 pass from A.Smith (Santos kick), 10:52. Drive: 8 plays, 80 yards, 4:08. Key Plays: A.Smith 18 pass to Sherman; West 13 run; A.Smith 10 pass to Kelce on 3rd-and-8; A.Smith 12 pass to Maclin. Kansas City 7, Oakland 0. KC—Ware 3 run (Santos kick), :51. Drive: 12 plays, 87 yards, 6:05. Key Plays: A.Smith 9 run on 3rd-and-4; Ware 15 run; A.Smith 6 run on 4th-and-1; A.Smith 16 pass to Conley; Maclin 18 run. Kansas City 14, Oakland 0. Second Quarter Oak—FG Janikowski 29, 13:40. Drive: 5 plays, 27 yards, 2:11. Key Plays: Jones 70 kickoff return to Kansas City 38; Carr 19 pass to Walford; Carr 10 pass to Murray. Kansas City 14, Oakland 3. Oak—Amerson 24 interception return (Janikowski kick), 3:27. Kansas City 14, Oakland 10. Third Quarter KC—Alexander safety, 9:01. Kansas City 16, Oakland 10. KC—Harris 15 pass from A.Smith (Santos kick), 7:03. Drive: 4 plays, 53 yards, 1:58. Key Plays: A.Smith 17 pass to Maclin on 3rd-and-4; Mack 15-yard roughing the passer penalty. Kansas City 23, Oakland 10. Fourth Quarter Oak—Crabtree 31 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 2:01. Drive: 5 plays, 72 yards, 1:14. Key Plays: Gained possession on downs at Oakland 28; Helu Jr. 3 run on 4th-and-1; R.Parker 15-yard taunting penalty; S.Smith 14-yard defensive pass interference penalty. Kansas City 23, Oakland 17. A—76,114. Time—2:57. ——— Oak KC FIRST DOWNS 14 23 Rushing 2 12 Passing 9 9 Penalty 3 2 THIRD DOWN EFF 3-14 6-13 FOURTH DOWN EFF 1-1 1-2 TOTAL NET YARDS 205 339 Total Plays 55 65 Avg Gain 3.7 5.2 NET YARDS RUSHING 48 189 Rushes 16 39 Avg per rush 3.0 4.8 NET YARDS PASSING 157 150 Sacked-Yds lost 6-37 1-9 Gross-Yds passing 194 159 Completed-Att. 21-33 15-25 Had Intercepted 1 2 Yards-Pass Play 4.0 5.8 KICKOFFS-EndZone-TB 5-1-1 4-3-0 PUNTS-Avg. 7-38.7 5-35.6 Punts blocked 1 0 FGs-PATs blocked 0-0 0-0 TOTAL RETURN YARDAGE 173 52 Punt Returns 0-0 3-22 Kickoff Returns 4-147 3-30 Interceptions 2-26 1-0 PENALTIES-Yds 7-59 5-55 FUMBLES-Lost 2-0 0-0 TIME OF POSSESSION 25:05 34:55 ——— INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Oakland, Murray 11-31, Carr 2-12, Helu Jr. 3-5. Kansas City, Ware 16-76, A.Smith 9-61, West 13-34, Maclin 1-18. PASSING—Oakland, Carr 21-33-1-194. Kansas City, A.Smith 14-24-2-156, Santos 1-1-0-3. RECEIVING—Oakland, Walford 4-46, Murray 4-25, Crabtree 3-34, Roberts 3-20, Helu Jr. 2-23, Cooper 2-20, Rivera 2-12, Olawale 1-14. Kansas City, Maclin 3-54, A.Wilson 3-24, Conley 2-22, Sherman 2-21, Avant 2-15, Harris 1-15, Kelce 1-10, West 1-(minus 2). PUNT RETURNS—Oakland, None. Kansas City, Hammond Jr. 3-22. KICKOFF RETURNS—Oakland, Jones 3-124, Ross 1-23. Kansas City, Conley 1-14, Ware 1-14, Branch 1-2. TACKLES-ASSISTS-SACKS—Oakland, Mack 7-3-0, Woodson 6-1-0, Alexander 5-1-0, Carrie 5-00, Heeney 4-0-0, M.Smith 3-2-0, Ellis 3-0-0, Harris 2-1-1, Lofton 2-1-0, Mays 2-1-0, Amerson 2-0-0, McGee 1-1-0, D.Williams 1-1-0, Autry 1-0-0, Hayden 1-0-0, A.Holmes 1-0-0, Mayowa 1-0-0, McGill 1-0-0, Olawale 1-0-0, Thorpe 1-0-0. Kansas City, Johnson 8-2-0, R.Parker 5-1-1, S.Smith 4-2-0, Branch 4-0-1, Zombo 3-1-1, Howard 3-1-1, Ford 2-1-1, Bailey 2-0-0, Mauga 1-1-0, Sorensen 1-1-0, DeVito 1-0-1, Fleming 1-0-0, Hali 1-0-0, Moses 1-0-0, Nelson 1-0-0, Peters 1-0-0, Poe 1-0-0, A.Wilson 1-0-0. INTERCEPTIONS—Oakland, Amerson 1-24, Carrie 1-2. Kansas City, R.Parker 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None. Chiefs: Morse sidelined Continued from p. 1 The Raiders (7-9) accounted for two of those victories. “We believe in each other. That’s what happens when a team and a family come together,” Chiefs running back Charcandrick West said. “This is a super rare team. We have something special going on here.” In perhaps their final season in Oakland, the Raiders only mustered a field goal on offense until the final minutes, when Carr connected with Michael Crabtree from 31 yards out. They did get the ball back with 1:34 left, but Carr took one final sack that helped time expire. Carr finished with 194 yards passing, leaving him 13 yards short of 4,000 for the season. Latavius Murray, the AFC’s rushing leader coming in, carried 11 times for just 31 yards, while David Amerson had a pick-six late in the first half for the Raiders’ only other touchdown. “We sputtered,” said Carr, who hurt his right hand during the game. “Sometimes when we needed it the most, we looked like ourselves. But other times we just looked sloppy.” The Chiefs started crisply for the third straight game, driving 80 yards for a score on their opening possession. Jeremy Maclin capped it with a 25-yard touchdown reception. After forcing a punt, the Chiefs cobbled together a creative 12-play, 87-yard drive that included a jet sweep by Maclin for a first down. Spencer Ware’s short touchdown run made it 14-0. “We started the game great,” Smith said. “We were rolling.” It was still 14-3 when Smith threw interceptions on consecutive passes, though neither of them was to Charles Woodson — the veteran safety playing the final game of his sterling 18-year www.newstribune.com career. The first was picked by T.J. Carrie late in the second quarter. Then, after Carr was picked off in the end zone by the Chiefs’ Ron Parker a few minutes later, Smith tossed another pass that was caught by Amerson and returned 24 yards for a touchdown that got Oakland within 14-10. Smith had only thrown five interceptions all season, at one point going 312 passes without one. “It’s funny how that happens,” he said, “back to back.” The Raiders’ offense fared no better, though. On their first chance of the second half, Carr was sacked twice and Marquette King had his punt blocked through the end zone for a safety. Kansas City got the ball back on the free kick and got back in synch on offense. Smith hit Maclin for a long gain on third down, and then hit Demetrius Harris in the end zone. It was the seventh catch of the season for Harris, and the first of the former college basketball player’s career. The Raiders got within 23-17 on Crabtree’s touchdown, but their comeback ran out of time. “I would have liked to walk off the field with a win,” said Woodson, who began his career with Oakland in the same stadium on Sept. 6, 1998. “There’s nothing like going out there between the lines every Sunday afternoon or whatever day you play. I had such a great time doing it.” Notes: Maclin briefly left the game with a bruised hip. He returned to finish. … Chiefs C Mitch Morse was being evaluated for a concussion and did not return. … Woodson finished with 65 picks, tied for fifth in NFL history. … The Chiefs had 189 yards rushing. The Raiders had 48. AP Chiefs fullback Anthony Sherman (42) and linebacker Frank Zombo watch the Broncos’ game against the Chargers on the big screen following Sunday’s game against the Raiders in Kansas City. Browns: Lack talent Continued from p. 1 in the search. “We want to get the right person,” Haslam said. “I don’t know if it’s going to take two weeks or two months.” Once the Browns have their coach, they then will hire a general manager. Haslam said Sashi Brown has been promoted to vice president of football operations and will have control over the 53-man roster. Haslam still believes the Browns are attractive to quality candidates and downplayed the idea the team needs to make a “splash” with its coaching hire. “We want to find the right head coach who I believe will be the leader of the team and the face of the franchise,” said Haslam, who returned to FirstEnergy Stadium following a meeting with Pettine at team headquarters in Berea, Ohio. “We are very determined to get that right person.” Following Sunday’s game, the 50-year-old Pettine said he understood change was looming — and inevitable. “It should be a topic of speculation, given what our results have been,” Pettine told reporters. “It is a bottom-line business and you guys don’t have a column in the newspaper for moral victories. Our record is that we have won three of our last 21 games. That is just not good enough.” It hasn’t helped that the C3 Browns lacked talent, especially offensive playmakers, and that was Farmer’s fault. The Browns have whiffed on high draft picks, wasted money on a defense that showed little improvement, and remain at the bottom of one of the NFL’s toughest divisions. Manziel: Continued from p. 1 winter specializing in drug and alcohol abuse. He began the season as a backup, took over as starter and was benched two games by Pettine after a video surfaced of him partying in Austin, Texas, during a bye week. C4 SPORTS MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Title fight Clemson’s O-line vs. Alabama’s defensive front seven CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Clemson’s offensive line has conquered challenges all season. Its final one — and perhaps biggest — will come in the national championship game against Alabama’s dominating defense. “We’ve always been a question mark around here,” Tigers center Jay Guillermo said. There certainly will be more questions about the line and the top-ranked Tigers (14-0) leading up to their matchup on Jan. 11 in Arizona with the powerful Crimson Tide (13-1), which completely shut down Big Ten champion Michigan State 38-0 in the Cotton Bowl last Thursday night. No. 2 Alabama held the Spartans to a season-low 239 yards as linebacker Reggie Ragland and defensive end Jonathan Allen had their way against Michigan State’s offensive line, combining for four sacks and six tackles for loss. The Clemson offensive line — none who were starters before this year — know they have to fare better, even if there are questions whether they actually can. “People doubt us all the time,” Tigers coach Dabo Swinney said. “Nobody believes in this team except these guys.” The Tigers’ unit is a group that early on didn’t look like it could anchor a national championship run. AP (Left) Alabama defensive lineman Jonathan Allen sacks Michigan State quarterback Connor Cook during the first half of the Cotton Bowl on Thursday in Arlington, Texas. (Right) Clemson quarterback Deshaun Watson (4) is congratulated by linemen Christian Wilkins (42) and Mitch Hyatt (75) after Watson scored a touchdown during the first half of the Orange Bowl on Thursday in Miami Gardens, Fla. Of the two returning starters from last season, center Ryan Norton was slowed by an injury and tackle Isaiah Battle left the team for the NFL supplemental draft in the summer, when he was selected by the Rams. Clemson had to rely on Guillermo, a junior who had given up football last season because of personal issues, to snap the ball to quarterback Deshaun Watson and a talented, yet at that time, unproven true freshman Mitch Hyatt to protect Watson’s blindside. They managed to answer the challenges 14 straight times. The group, which also includes guards Eric Mac Lain and Tyrone Crowder and right tackle Joe Gore, gradually gelled and became the engine that drives Clemson’s relentless offense. Watson and tailback Wayne Gallman surpassed 100 yards on the ground in the 37-17 win against Oklahoma at the Orange Bowl and the Tigers finished with 312 yards rushing, The line helped Watson become Clemson’s single-season total yardage leader (4,731) and Gallman gain the most rushing yards (1,482) in school history. All five of members of the offensive line received honors on one of the three all-Atlantic Coast Conference postseason teams. “It’s been a long journey,” said Mac Lain, the former tight end who had made only one start before this season. Watson, who was coming off a knee injury this offseason, remembers the bond he saw growing among the linemen. “It was just really during summer workouts, all the stuff they did,” Watson said. “Just hanging out. You could see the relationship building.” Once the season began, things did not come so quickly. The Clemson offense was held to 20 points, its lowest total all year, against Louisville in September; then 296 yards, also a season low, a game later against Notre Dame. But the linemen knew they were close to putting things together. Clemson has had 10 straight games of 500 yards or more on offense, powering to an undefeated season, an ACC title and the chance to try for the program’s first national title since 1981. “We really had a mentality here of wanting to prove people wrong,” Guillermo said. Clemson will do that in a big way if it can hold off the Crimson Tide defense, which limited Michigan State to 29 yards rushing. Alabama’s Allen said the Crimson Tide concentrates on taking away the run so they can get after the quarterback. “If you stop the run, you get rewarded with pass rushing,” said Allen, who had two sacks against the Spartans. “That’s just our mentality.” If Alabama shuts down Clemson’s run game, it will go a long way in helping Alabama win its fourth national championship in seven years. The Tigers, however, believe they can slow down the Crimson Tide so Watson and Gallman can make the plays they’ve made all season. “We know we’re only going to go as far as our offensive line takes us,” Guillermo said. “It starts with us putting the game on our back. That’s what we want to do.” AP AP (Left) Kansas guard Frank Mason III passes the ball against Baylor on Saturday in Lawrence, Kan. (Right) Oklahoma forward Ryan Spangler shoots a layup past Hawaii center and former Missouri Tiger Stefan Jovanovic in the Diamond Head Classic on Dec. 23 in Honolulu. Top two to tango Kansas, Oklahoma poised for possible 1-2 matchup LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — There is a nice bit of symmetry to the fact that Kansas and Oklahoma could be meeting tonight at Allen Fieldhouse as the top two teams in the country. That’s because they were also 1-2 the last time their league had such a matchup. Of course, those were the days of the old Big Eight, before the Big 12 expanded to 12 — and then became 10. It happened in the 1990 conference tournament semifinals at Kansas City’s Kemper Arena, when the top-ranked Sooners ran roughshod against the second-ranked Jayhawks on their way to the title. This time, Kansas will likely be No. 1 and Oklahoma will be No. 2, assuming voters move both up a notch when the AP poll is released today. Top-ranked Michigan State lost to Iowa this past week. “It’s going to be fun,” Sooners star Buddy Hield said. The matchup comes just three days into the conference schedule. The Jayhawks blew out No. 23 Baylor 102-74 on Saturday while the Sooners rallied past No. 11 Iowa State 87-83, setting up the potential 1-2 matchup. Kansas (12-1) has not lost since blowing a lead against the Spartans in the Champions Classic in Chicago in mid-November. The Sooners (12-0) are off to their best start in 28 years. The two teams couldn’t be more similar, starting with their experience. The Jayhawks return most of their core from last season, led by high-scoring guard Wayne Selden and steady Perry Ellis, making them one of Bill Self’s most experienced teams. Oklahoma has four players — Hield, Isaiah Cousins, Jordan Woodard and Ryan Spangler — that have each started the last 80 games. Khadeem Lattin gives the Sooners’s top five 332 combined starts. Then there’s their composition. The Jayhawks have become a backcourt-oriented team that starts two point guards in Frank Mason III and Devonte Graham. They’re shooting 46 percent from the 3-point line, second best in the NCAA, and are averaging 88.3 points, trailing only The Citadel and Duke. The Sooners likewise have a pair of exceptional ball-handlers in Cousins and Woodard. Throw in Hield and Oklahoma has a backcourt trio that is a big reason the Sooners are shooting 45.3 percent from 3, a notch behind Kansas, and averaging 87 points — sixth-best nationally. “I’ve seen them play a couple of times. I watch their guards and stuff,” Graham said. “They’re aggressive, just like we are. They can knock down open shots. Good one-on-one players. They have to keep us out of the paint, just like we have to keep them out of the paint.” The last meeting between No. 1 and No. 2 occurred on Nov. 12, 2013, when Michigan State knocked off Kentucky in Chicago. But there have only been five such meetings since the turn of the century, and one of those was the 2005 national title game when North Carolina beat Illinois. Even rarer is a 1-2 matchup at Allen Fieldhouse. The storied building has bathed in such a spotlight only once, when second-ranked Missouri beat No. 1 Kansas 77-71 on Feb. 13, 1990. Self was a young assistant at Oklahoma State at the time, and the Jayhawks would go on to lose to the Sooners in that other 1-2 matchup a few weeks later. “What could be really cool, it doesn’t happen often, is where 1 plays 1,” Self said, alluding to the fact that Kansas may top the AP poll and Oklahoma may lead the coaches’ poll. “I think that makes for a pretty interesting storyline.” Chicago’s Jimmy Butler celebrates a 3-pointer against the Raptors on Sunday in Toronto as former Missouri Tiger DeMarre Carrol looks on. Historic company Butler tops Jordan’s Bulls record with 40 points in half TORONTO (AP) — For one half, Jimmy Butler was better than Michael Jordan. That’s all it was, Butler said. One half. Still, it was an amazing run. Butler broke the Hall of Famer’s team record for points in a half, scoring 40 of his 42 after the break to lead the Chicago Bulls against the Toronto Raptors 115-113 on Sunday. Jordan had 39, also in the second half, in a game against Milwaukee in 1989. Butler shot 14-of-19 in the final two quarters after a 1-for-4 start in the Bulls’ fourth straight win. “Don’t compare me to him,” Butler said. “I don’t want to be compared to him because then people are going to think I got to do what he did. I’m trying, but we’re nowhere near the same player.” One of Jordan’s teammates was pretty impressed, though. “What a performance by JimmyButler. You don’t see individual efforts like this too often,” Scottie Pippen said in a tweet. Butler’s performance came after he got stitches in his mouth. He was accidentally elbowed by former Missouri Tiger DeMarre Carroll in the second quarter after making a basket. He needed one stitch to close the wound and ready him for the second half. www.newstribune.com “I was mad but I just came out and was just aggressive,” he said. He scored 21 points in the third quarter, the most the Raptors have given up to an opponent in a single quarter this season, shooting 7-of-9 from the floor and making all seven of his free-throw attempts. In the fourth, Butler put the Bulls in front with a 3-pointer from the corner with 30.9 seconds to go to give Chicago its first lead since early in the second. A pair of free throws by Butler closed out the victory shortly afterward. His coach was in awe of Butler’s outing. “I’ll say this: It’s the best performance I’ve seen coaching,” said Fred Hoiberg. The Bulls coach was also full of praise for the way his team responded in the second half, saying the four-game winning streak his club is now on closed out “a very important week for us.” Butler’s teammates were equally complimentary. “It’s not just that he scored a lot of points, he did it in a very efficient way and he did it in a way that was critical for us to win the ballgame,” said Pau Gasol, who registered his 17th double-double of the season with 19 points and 13 rebounds. While Raptors coach Dwane Casey said he tried everything to slow Butler down, he was also upset about being in front for the majority of the game and failing to close out the victory. The Raptors haven’t beaten the Bulls since Dec. 31, 2013. “We can’t give up 34 points in the fourth quarter,” he said. “You have to put your foot down, put your foot on their neck and close it out. I thought we had control up to that point, but we just didn’t put our stamp on it in the fourth quarter defensively.” DeMar DeRozan, who led the Raptors with 24 points and made a season-high three 3-pointers, had a chance to win the game at the end with a 3-pointer, but his shot narrowly missed, hitting the rim and bouncing clear. “I thought I had a good look at the end for the 3,” he said. “I thought it was good.” Lowry with the Double Toronto guard Kyle Lowry earned his second straight double-double and fifth of the season with 22 points and a gamehigh 10 assists. Lowry is now averaging 8.7 assists in his last six games. Quotable Butler on the elbow from Carroll that required stitches: “He didn’t do it on purpose but he messed my swagger up so I can’t go on a date for a while.” No Rose Derrick Rose sat out his third straight game with a right hamstring injury, although Hoiberg said, “it is definitely getting better.” Rose will undergo an MRI today on the knee, the same knee he has previously had two surgeries on. NFL MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 C5 Manning gets the win in relief Comes off bench to help Broncos earn top seed in AFC DENVER (AP) — The top seed in the AFC playoffs belongs to Denver, along with a quarterback quandary. Peyton Manning’s stint as a backup didn’t last very long. He replaced Brock Osweiler in the third quarter Sunday and led the Broncos to a 27-20 win against San Diego. Coach Gary Kubiak said he played a hunch, but he refused to reveal who will be his starter in the playoffs — or even acknowledge he has quite the puzzle at the position. Osweiler threw for 232 yards, including a 72-yard TD pass to Demaryius Thomas on the game’s second play. But he was victimized by five turnovers, including two interceptions that weren’t his fault, and a fumble by Emmanuel Sanders at the 10-yard line after a 46-yard reception. One of Osweiler’s interceptions went off receiver Jordan Norwood’s hands. His arm was hit by a linebacker on the other, and his day was done after a fumble by C.J. Anderson on the second play after halftime. None of that was his fault, but the Broncos needed a spark and Manning provided it. “I don’t think Brock did anything wrong,” Kubiak said. “I know we had the turnovers, but a couple of them he had nothing to do with. But just my gut told me to turn it over to (Manning) and let him lead the football team. I’m just very proud of him. He’s worked really hard to stay there for us and it couldn’t be a bigger day to be there for us.” Manning led Denver to 20 points in 1½ quarters despite going just 5-of-9 for 69 yards. “It was tough on the emotions,” Osweiler said. “But winning the AFC West is what it’s all about.” Denver did that for the fifth consecutive time, staving off the Kansas City Chiefs, whose 23-17 win against Oakland would have sent the Broncos (12-4) tumbling into the wild-card round with a loss to San Diego. The Chargers (4-12) wrapped up what might have been their final season representing San Diego as ownership tries to move the team to L.A. Manning’s last scoring drive lasted one play: a 23-yard run by Ronnie Hillman after emergency safety Shiloh Keo, who surrendered Antonio Gates’ go-ahead TD in the third quarter, picked off Philip Rivers’ errant pass with just under five minutes remaining. Keo was in because starter Darian Stewart aggravated a pulled hamstring, one of two big injuries for Denver. The Broncos also lost Pro Bowl pass rusher DeMarcus Ware to a knee injury. Rivers, for one, was surprised to see Osweiler get the hook. “It wasn’t like he was stinking it up out there,” Rivers said. “But not surprised in the sense that you have a guy that hasn’t been a backup in a game since ’94 and is one of the best of all time.” Manning was healthy enough to suit up for the first time in seven weeks. Previously, in street clothes he’d watched his longtime understudy either from the sideline or on TV while dealing ished a third straight losing season and a fourth straight year out of the playoffs. After meeting with Eagles interim coach Pat Shurmur at midfield, Coughlin walked off the field, waving to the crowd just before walking into the tunnel. Coughlin, who led the Giants to two Super Bowl titles in his 12 seasons, has a year left on his contract. His future is expected to be decided soon by co-owners John Mara and Steve Tisch. The 69-year-old might retire and end his 20-year NFL head coaching career. Redskins 34, Cowboys 23 AP Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning pulls grass out of his helmet after a hit in Sunday’s game with the Chargers in Denver. with an injured left foot. This was Manning’s first game serving as a backup since his freshman year at Tennessee when he replaced an injured Todd Helton against Mississippi State on Sept. 24, 1994. Because he didn’t start, Manning didn’t break the tie he holds with Brett Favre for most regular-season wins, 186. Manning said his foot felt good after the game, but he has to see how he feels today after taking a hard hit from defensive tackle Damion Square. “He got me right in the chest,” Manning said. “I’ve got to see how I feel tomorrow. I’m glad we won the division. I’m glad we won this game today. That would have been pretty sickening (to lose). It’s been a different year. I was glad to be able to contribute in some way today.” Bills 22, Jets 17 ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Ryan Fitzpatrick threw interceptions on each of New York’s final three drives and the Jets’ playoff hopes were dashed. The Jets (10-6) would have made the postseason for the first time since 2010 with a win, but the defeat combined with Pittsburgh’s win at Cleveland ended those hopes. New York had a fivegame winning streak stopped, and the loss came against former Jets coach Rex Ryan — fired by New York and hired by the Bills (8-8) last January. Fitzpatrick, who had thrown just one interception in the Jets’ winning streak, was picked off by Leodis McKelvin in the end zone early in the fourth quarter with New York driving. The game was decided when Fitzpatrick’s side-arm pass over the middle was intercepted by A.J. Tarpley with 11 seconds remaining. Steelers 28, Browns 12 CLEVELAND — Ben Roethlisberger threw three touchdown passes, Pittsburgh’s defense dominated and the Steelers slipped into the AFC playoffs with the win against Cleveland. The Steelers (10-6) had to win and needed Buffalo to knock off the New York Jets to make the postseason. Pittsburgh did its part, then earned a wild-card berth when the Bills beat the Jets. Pittsburgh will play at Cincinnati to start the playoffs. Roethlisberger threw for 349 yards, 187 to Antonio Brown, who had 13 catches and a TD. Wilson threw three touchdown passes in a second-quarter outburst and Seattle snapped Arizona’s nine-game winning streak. Seattle will play at Minnesota in the wild-card round. The Seahawks (10-6) dominated from their opening possession and led 30-6 at the half. It was a sour end to the regular season for the NFC West champion Cardinals (13-3), who already had clinched the NFC’s No. 2 seed and a first-round playoff bye. Dolphins 20, Patriots 10 MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Tom Brady was sacked twice and knocked down at least half a dozen times, and New England missed a chance to clinch the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs. Brady watched New England’s final offensive series from the sideline. With the Patriots eager to protect his health, he threw a season-low 21 passes, but even so was lucky to make it through the game in one piece. New England (12-4) ends up Eagles 35, Giants 30 a No. 2 seed after Denver earned EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. the top seed. — The Giants suffered anothTexans 30, Jaguars 6 er tough loss in what may have HOUSTON — J.J. Watt been Tom Coughlin’s final game. and Whitney Mercilus led the Former Giant Walter Thurdefense and Jonathan Grimes mond scored on an 83-yard scored twice to help the Texans fumble return in the third quarclinch the AFC South. ter and Philadelphia added to Houston will host Kansas City Coughlin’s season-long frustrain a wild-card game. tions. Grimes had a 12-yard touchIt was the third straight loss down reception and added for the Giants (6-10) and fina 3-yard rushing score in the second quarter to help Houston take a 20-3 lead by halftime. Kareem Jackson added a score on an interception return in the fourth quarter to pad the lead. Watt, playing without a cast for the first time since breaking his left hand Dec. 9, had had three sacks, forced a fumble and recovered another one to help the Texans (9-7) to their first division title and playoff berth since 2012. and gave Indy a 20-14 halftime lead with an 18-yard TD pass. Tennessee (3-13) clinched the No. 1 draft pick by losing its fourth straight. Quarterback Zach Mettenberger fell to 0-10 as a starter. Saints 20, Falcons 17 ATLANTA — Jamarca Sanford’s interception at the Atlanta 25 with less than two minutes remaining set up Kai Forbath’s 30-yard field goal as time expired. Sanford cut in front of Devonta Freeman for the interception with 1:47 remaining. Lions 24, Bears 20 CHICAGO — Matthew Stafford threw for 298 yards and three touchdowns, Calvin Johnson had 137 yards receiving for the Lions. Detroit (7-9) avoided a lastplace finish in the NFC North with its sixth win in eight games. Whether the Lions bring back coach Jim Caldwell for a third season remains to be seen. He led them to a rare playoff appearance last year, but a 1-7 start put his future in doubt. The Lions intercepted Jay Cutler three times. ARLINGTON, Texas — Kirk Cousins threw for three touchdowns before leaving late in the first half of a playoff tuneup. Cousins broke Jay Shroeder’s franchise record for yards passing in a season, finishing with 4,166. Had the game mattered, he might have threatened Sonny Jurgensen’s 48-year-old team record of 31 touchdown passes, instead settling for 29. The Redskins (9-7) won four straight to finish the season, their longest streak since winning the last seven the last time Vikings 20, Packers 13 they made the playoffs in 2012. GREEN BAY, Wis. — The The NFC East champions will be the No. 4 seed on wild-card Minnesota Vikings won the NFC North by holding on for a 20-13 weekend and host the Packers. win. Colts 30, Titans 24 Adrian Peterson ran for a INDIANAPOLIS — Recently signed Josh Freeman and Ryan touchdown, cornerback Captain Lindley each threw a touchdown Munnerlyn returned a fumble 55 pass in the first half and Jerrell yards for a score and Minnesota Freeman scored on a 23-yard (11-5) claimed its first division interception in the second for title since 2009. The Vikings now will host the Colts. The Colts (8-8) won their last the Seattle Seahawks for a wildtwo games to avoid their first los- card game. The Packers (10-6) ing season since 2011, but didn’t will travel to Washington after get the help they needed — a watching their four-year reign Houston loss and seven other atop the NFC North end. The upstart Vikings survived games to go the right way — to despite a shaky finish in hostile make the postseason. Freeman was 15-of-28 for 149 territory. The defense knocked yards and one interception while away a desperation pass in the running Indy’s regular offense. end zone from Aaron Rodgers Lindley ran the 2-minute offense on fourth down as time expired. Bengals 24, Ravens 16 CINCINNATI — A.J. McCarron overcame a rough start and threw a pair of TD passes. The Bengals (12-4) matched the best record in franchise history — they also won 12 games during the 1981 and 1988 seasons when they reached the Super Bowl. The AFC North champions wasted a chance to clinch the No. 2 seed when they lost in Denver 20-17 on Monday night. Panthers 38, Buccaneers 10 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Cam Newton ran for two touchdowns and threw for two more, and Carolina captured the NFC’s No. 1 seed for the first time. Newton tied Steve Young’s NFL record for most career TDs rushing by a quarterback with 43. Young took 15 seasons to reach that plateau; Newton did it in five. Seahawks 36, Cardinals 6 GLENDALE, Ariz. — Russell >> Reach qualified job seekers on our site -- & across thousands of additional job sites on TheJobNetwork TM >> Find passive job seekers instantly in our resume database << Save time with Real-Time Job Matching TM & applicant ranking AP Former Missouri Tiger Shane Ray (left) and Derek Wolfe team up to sack Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers in the Broncos’ win Sunday in Denver. www.newstribune.com C6 SPORTS MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Wild one in Phoenix West Virginia works late into night to get win in Cactus Bowl AP West Virginia wide receiver David Sills celebrates scoring the game-winning touchdown against Arizona State in the Cactus Bowl. PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona State’s point-after conversion chart called for the Sun Devils to go for 2 after scoring a go-ahead touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Instead, they inexplicably kicked the extra point to take a six-point lead, making it easier for West Virginia to pull out a wild 43-42 victory in the Cactus Bowl early Sunday. “We were supposed to go for 2 and we didn’t,” Arizona State coach Todd Graham said. “Mismanagement there and that is my responsibility.” The Cactus Bowl made up for its late start with an assault on the record books. The teams combined for 1,196 yards of offense and the 950 yards passing were the most in the Cactus Bowl’s 27-year history. West Virginia (8-5) is typically a run-oriented team, but went to the air against the Sun Devils. Skyler Howard shredded Arizona State’s shoddy defensive backfield, throwing for a Cactus Bowl-record 532 yards and five touchdowns, including a 15-yarder to David Sills with 2:19 left. The junior broke the Cactus Bowl record of 476 yards set by Washington State’s Drew Bledsoe against Utah in 1992, and blew past the school bowl record of 429 yards set by Marc Bulger against Missouri in Tucson in 1998. “He is gritty, he doesn’t ever give up, he continues to go. It doesn’t matter what people think and people say,” West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen said. “He just keeps going to work every day and keeps getting better and better. I am really proud of this kid.” Tim White and Mike Bercovici did their best to keep Arizona State (6-7) in it. White broke the school record for all-purpose yards with 289, scoring two touchdowns and even a blocked PAT return. Bercovici threw for 418 yards and hit Gary Chambers on a 58-yard pass for his fourth TD of the game to put Arizona State ahead by five with about 5 minutes left. The decision to kick the extra point to make it 42-36 instead of going for 2 ended up costing Arizona State. West Virginia went ahead by one on Howard’s pass to Sills and the PAT, and Arizona State turned the ball over on downs on its last possession to end its chances. “It was my fault; should have made sure it happened,” Graham said of the 2-point conversion gaffe. It didn’t help that the Sun Devils couldn’t stop the Mountaineers’ suddenly prolific passing game. West Virginia came in 14th nationally in rushing offense, thanks in large part to Wendell Smallwood. The Mountaineers clearly saw something they liked in Arizona State’s porous pass defense, particularly cornerback Kweishi Brown. “We saw what we had over there and just took advantage of it,” Howard said. West Virginia went at Brown early and picked on the rest of Arizona State’s secondary throughout the first quarter, gaining 191 yards on eight receptions. Trouble was, the Mountaineers couldn’t capitalize, settling for three field goals. The Mountaineers kept going at Brown, though, and Shelton Gibson blew past him for a 59-yard touchdown in the second quarter. The Sun Devils took Brown out for a few plays, but West Virginia went right at him when he returned, scoring on a 10-yard pass from Howard to Daikiel Shorts. Howard, whose career high was 359 yards, had 334 on 15-of-26 passing by halftime. “They kept throwing over the top and scoring touchdowns,” Graham said. “We blew a couple coverages and then ran by.” Arizona State’s high-octane offense needed a tuneup early before it found a gear that worked in the second quarter, scoring on a tackle-breaking, 19-yard reception by Devin Lucien. But then it failed on three tries from inside West Virginia’s 5-yard line and settled for another field goal later. A strange turn of events kept the Sun Devils within 22-18 at halftime. Arizona State blocked the extra point after Shorts’ TD and White returned it 98 yards for the first 2-point conversion return in school history. West Virginia squibbed the ensuing kickoff and Arizona State recovered, taking advantage of the short field to set up Zane Gonzalez’s 35-yard field goal with a second left. The third quarter turned into a series of offensive counterpunches. The Sun Devils moved quickly for a 2-yard TD pass from Bercovici to White. White scored again late in the third quarter by breaking three tackles and tight-roping his way down the sideline on a 33-yard reception. The Mountaineers went back at Brown, scoring on a 64-yard pass from Howard to Gary Jennings, though it appeared Brown was expecting help from the safeties. Brown was alone when Gibson later caught a 37-yard completion and Shorts scored on a 17-yard pass the next play to put West Virginia up 36-32 heading into the fourth quarter. Chambers scored the go-ahead touchdown with just under 5 minutes left when West Virginia safety Dravon Askew-Henry slipped, but the failure to go for 2 came back to haunt the Sun Devils. PREPBASKETBALLTOURNAMENTRESULTS,SCHEDULES Boys Tri-County Conf. Tournament AT ELDON SATURDAY, JAN. 2 First-round games No. 1 Blair Oaks 86, No. 8 Warsaw 32 No. 5 Hallsville 59, No. 4 California 57 No. 2 Southern Boone 74, No. 7 Versailles 41 No. 3 School of the Osage 55, No. 6 Eldon 49 TODAY, JAN. 4 Loser’s bracket semifinals Warsaw vs. California, 7:30 p.m. Versailles vs. Eldon, 9 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 5 Winner’s bracket semifinals Blair Oaks vs. Hallsville, 7:30 p.m. Southern Boone vs. School of the Osage, 9 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Seventh-place game Warsaw-California loser vs. Versailles-Eldon loser, 6 p.m. Fifth-place game Warsaw-California winner vs. Versailles-Eldon winner, 9 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Third-place game Blair Oaks-Hallsville loser vs. Southern BooneSchool of the Osage loser, 4 p.m. Championship game Blair Oaks-Hallsville winner vs. Southern BooneSchool of the Osage winner, 7 p.m. Owensville Tournament TODAY, JAN. 4 First-round games No. 1 Sullivan vs. No. 8 Steelville, 5:30 p.m. No. 4 Bourbon vs. No. 5 Wright City, 7 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 5 First-round games No. 3 Linn vs. No. 6 Owensville, 5:30 p.m. No. 2 Pacific vs. No. 7 Cuba, 7 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Winner’s bracket semifinals Sullivan-Steelville winner vs. Bourbon-Wright City winner, 5:30 p.m. Pacific-Cuba winner vs. Linn-Owensville winner, 7 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 8 Loser’s bracket semifinals Sullivan-Steelville loser vs. Bourbon-Wright City loser, 5:30 p.m. Pacific-Cuba loser vs. Linn-Owensville loser, 7 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Seventh-place game TBD, 2:30 p.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 4 p.m. Third-place game TBD, 5:30 p.m. Championship game TBD, 7 p.m. New Franklin Tournament TODAY, JAN. 4 First-round games No. 1 Westran vs. No. 8 Bunceton, 6 p.m. No. 4 Sturgeon vs. No. 5 Tipton, 9 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 5 First-round games No. 2 Fayette vs. No. 7 Sweet Springs, 6 p.m. No. 3 New Franklin vs. No. 6 Pilot Grove, 9 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6 Loser’s bracket semifinals Westran-Bunceton loser vs. Sturgeon-Tipton loser, 6 p.m. Fayette-Sweet Springs loser vs. New Franklin-Pilot Grove loser, 9 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Winner’s bracket semifinals Westran-Bunceton winner vs. Sturgeon-Tipton winner, 6 p.m. Fayette-Sweet Springs winner vs. New Franklin-Pilot Grove winner, 9 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 8 Seventh-place game TBD, 6 p.m. TBD, 9 p.m. TBD, 1 p.m. TBD, 4 p.m. Fifth-place game SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Third-place game Championship game Stover Tournament TUESDAY, JAN. 5 First-round games No. 4 Jamestown vs. No. 5 Stover, 4:30 p.m. No. 1 Tuscumbia vs. No. 8 Laquey, 6 p.m. No. 3 Stoutland vs. No. 6 Green Ridge, 7:30 p.m. No. 2 Cole Camp vs. No. 7 Russellville, 9 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Loser’s bracket semifinals Stoutland-Green Ridge loser vs. Cole Camp-Russellville loser, 4:30 p.m. Jamestown-Stover loser vs. Tuscumbia-Laquey loser, 9 p.m. Winner’s bracket semifinals Stoutland-Green Ridge winner vs. Cole Camp-Russellville winner, 6 p.m. Jamestown-Stover winner vs. Tuscumbia-Laquey winner, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Seventh-place game TBD, 3 p.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 4:30 p.m. Third-place game TBD, 6 p.m. Championship game TBD, 7:30 p.m. Kaminsky Classic AT JOPLIN HIGH SCHOOL THURSDAY, JAN. 7 First-round games McDonald County vs. Lift for Life Academy, 4:30 p.m. Webb City vs. St. Louis Christian Academy, 6 p.m. Joplin vs. William Chrisman, 7:30 p.m. Francis Howell vs. Jefferson City, 9 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 8 Loser’s bracket semifinals McDonald County-Lift for Life Academy loser vs. Webb City-St. Louis Christian Academy loser, 4:30 p.m. Joplin-William Chrisman loser vs. Francis Howell-Jefferson City loser, 6 p.m. Winner’s bracket semifinals McDonald County-Lift for Life Academy winner vs. Webb City-St. Louis Christian Academy winner, 7:30 p.m. Joplin-William Chrisman winner vs. Francis Howell-Jefferson City winner, 9 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Seventh-place game TBD, 11 a.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 12:30 p.m. Third-place game TBD, 2 p.m. Championship game TBD, 3:30 p.m. Calvary Lutheran Tourney FRIDAY, JAN. 8 First-round games At Calvary Lutheran Vienna vs. The Fulton School at St. Albans, 7:30 p.m. Calvary Lutheran vs. Lutheran: Kansas City, 9 p.m. At Trinity Lutheran Chamois vs. St. Louis Christian Home School Association, 7:30 p.m. Belle vs. St. Elizabeth, 9 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Winner’s bracket semifinals Vienna-The Fulton School at St. Albans winner vs. Calvary Lutheran-Lutheran: Kansas City winner, 11 a.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Chamois-St. Louis Christian Home School Association winner vs. Belle-St. Elizabeth winner, 12:30 p.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Loser’s bracket semifinals Vienna-Fulton School at St. Albans loser vs. Calvary Lutheran-Lutheran: Kansas City loser, 11 a.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Chamois-St. Louis Christian Home School Association loser vs. Belle-St. Elizabeth loser, 12:30 p.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Seventh-place game TBD, 3:30 p.m. (at Lewis and Clark Middle School) Fifth-place game TBD, 3:30 p.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Third-place game TBD, 3:30 p.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Championship game TBD, 6:30 p.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) California Tournament POOL ASSIGNMENTS Pool A Fulton, Marshall, Southern Boone. Pool B Boonville, California, Fatima. SCHEDULE Monday, Jan. 11 7:30 p.m. — Southern Boone vs. Fulton 9 p.m. — Boonville vs. Fatima Tuesday, Jan. 12 7:30 p.m. — Fulton vs. Marshall 9 p.m. — Fatima vs. California Wednesday, Jan. 13 7:30 p.m. — Marshall vs. Southern Boone 9 p.m. — California vs. Boonville Friday, Jan. 15 Fifth-place game Pool A third place vs. Pool B third place, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 16 Third-place game Pool A second place vs. Pool B second place, 4:30 p.m. Championship game Pool A first place vs. Pool B first place, 7:30 p.m. South Callaway Invitational AT HIGH SCHOOL (HS), MIDDLE SCHOOL (MS) TUESDAY, JAN. 12 First-round games No. 1 New Bloomfield vs. No. 8 Missouri Military Academy, 6 p.m. (HS) No. 4 South Callaway vs. No. 5 New Haven, 7:30 p.m. (HS) No. 2 Montgomery County vs. No. 7 North Callaway, 6 p.m. (MS) No. 3 Hermann vs. No. 6 Russellville, 7:30 p.m. (MS) THURSDAY, JAN. 14 Winner’s bracket semifinals New Bloomfield-Missouri Military Academy winner vs. South Callaway-New Haven winner, 6 p.m. (HS) Montgomery County-North Callaway winner vs. Hermann-Russellville winner, 7:30 p.m. (HS) Loser’s bracket semifinals New Bloomfield-Missouri Military Academy loser vs. South Callaway-New Haven loser, 6 p.m. (MS) Montgomery County-North Callaway loser vs. Hermann-Russellville loser, 7:30 p.m. (MS) FRIDAY, JAN. 15 Seventh-place game TBD, 7:30 p.m. (MS) Fifth-place game TBD, 7:30 p.m. (HS) SATURDAY, JAN. 16 Third-place game TBD, 2:30 p.m. (HS) Championship game TBD, 5:30 p.m. (HS) Eldon Tournament THURSDAY, JAN. 28 First-round games Lebanon vs. Eugene, 4:30 p.m. Eldon vs. O’Fallon Christian, 6 p.m. Sedalia Smith-Cotton vs. Fox, 7:30 p.m. Marquette vs. School of the Osage, 9 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 29 Loser’s bracket semifinals Sedalia Smith-Cotton-Fox loser vs. Mar- quette-School of the Osage loser, 4:30 p.m. Lebanon-Eugene loser vs. Eldon-O’Fallon Christian loser, 6 p.m. Winner’s bracket semifinals Sedalia Smith-Cotton-Fox winner vs. Marquette-School of the Osage winner, 7:30 p.m. Lebanon-Eugene winner vs. Eldon-O’Fallon Christian winner, 9 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 30 Seventh-place game TBD, 1 p.m. (at Eldon Middle School) Fifth-place game TBD, 1 p.m. Third-place game TBD, 4 p.m. Championship game TBD, 7 p.m. Girls Tri-County Conf. Tournament AT ELDON SATURDAY, JAN. 2 First-round games No. 1 Southern Boone 84, No. 8 Versailles 21 No. 4 California 54, No. 5 Hallsville 49 (OT) No. 2 School of the Osage 73, No. 7 Warsaw 25 No. 3 Eldon 73, No. 6 Blair Oaks 57 TODAY, JAN. 4 Loser’s bracket semifinals Versailles vs. Hallsville, 4:30 p.m. Warsaw vs. Blair Oaks, 6 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 5 Winner’s bracket semifinals Southern Boone vs. California, 4:30 p.m. School of the Osage vs. Eldon, 6 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Seventh-place game Versailles-Hallsville loser vs. Warsaw-Blair Oaks loser, 4:30 p.m. Fifth-place game Versailles-Hallsville winner vs. Warsaw-Blair Oaks winner, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Third-place game Southern Boone-California loser vs. School of the Osage-Eldon loser, 2:30 p.m. Championship game Southern Boone-California winner vs. School of the Osage-Eldon winner, 5:30 p.m. New Franklin Tournament TODAY, JAN. 4 First-round games No. 4 New Franklin vs. No. 5 Pilot Grove, 4:30 p.m. No. 1 Tipton vs. No. 8 Bunceton, 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 5 First-round games No. 2 Westran vs. No. 7 Fayette, 4:30 p.m. No. 3 Sturgeon vs. No. 6 Sweet Springs, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6 Loser’s bracket semifinals New Franklin-Pilot Grove loser vs. Tipton-Bunceton loser, 4:30 p.m. Westran-Fayette loser vs. Sturgeon-Sweet Springs loser, 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 7 Winner’s bracket semifinals New Franklin-Pilot Grove winner vs. Tipton-Bunceton winner, 4:30 p.m. Westran-Fayette winner vs. Sturgeon-Sweet Springs winner, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 8 Seventh-place game TBD, 4:30 p.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Third-place game TBD, 11:30 a.m. Championship game TBD, 2:30 p.m. Stover Tournament TODAY, JAN. 4 First-round games No. 1 Stoutland vs. No. 8 Green Ridge, 3 p.m. www.newstribune.com No. 4 Stover vs. No. 5 Holden, 4:30 p.m. No. 2 Tuscumbia vs. No. 7 Laquey, 6 p.m. No. 3 Jamestown vs. No. 6 Cole Camp, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6 Loser’s bracket semifinals Tuscumbia-Laquey loser vs. Jamestown-Cole Camp loser, 4:30 p.m. Stoutland-Green Ridge loser vs. Stover-Holden loser, 9 p.m. Winner’s bracket semifinals Tuscumbia-Laquey winner vs. Jamestown-Cole Camp winner, 6 p.m. Stoutland-Green Ridge winner vs. Stover-Holden winner, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 8 Seventh-place game TBD, 4:30 p.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 6 p.m. Third-place game TBD, 7:30 p.m. Championship game TBD, 9 p.m. Calvary Lutheran Tourney FRIDAY, JAN. 8 First-round games At Calvary Lutheran Metro East Lutheran vs. Linn, 4:30 p.m. Calvary Lutheran vs. The Fulton School at St. Albans, 6 p.m. At Trinity Lutheran Chamois vs. St. Paul Lutheran: Farmington, 4:30 p.m. Lutheran: Kansas City vs. Belle, 6 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 9 Winner’s bracket semifinals Metro East Lutheran-Linn winner vs. Calvary Lutheran-The Fulton School at St. Albans winner, 8 a.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Chamois-St. Paul Lutheran: Farmington winner vs. Lutheran: Kansas City-Belle winner, 9:30 a.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Loser’s bracket semifinals Metro East Lutheran-Linn loser vs. Calvary Lutheran-The Fulton School at St. Albans loser, 8 a.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Chamois-St. Paul Lutheran: Farmington loser vs. Lutheran: Kansas City-Belle loser, 9:30 a.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Seventh-place game TBD, 2 p.m. (at Lewis and Clark Middle School) Fifth-place game TBD, 2 p.m. (at Trinity Lutheran) Third-place game TBD, 2 p.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) Championship game TBD, 5 p.m. (at Calvary Lutheran) California Tournament MONDAY, JAN. 11 First-round games No. 1 Jefferson City vs. No. 8 Marshall, 4:30 p.m. No. 4 California vs. No. 5 Boonville, 6 p.m. TUESDAY, JAN. 12 First-round games No. 2 Southern Boone vs. No. 7 Battle, 4:30 p.m. No. 3 Fulton vs. No. 6 Fatima, 6 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13 Loser’s bracket semifinals Jefferson City-Marshall loser vs. California-Boonville loser, 4:30 p.m. Southern Boone-Battle loser vs. Fulton-Fatima loser, 6 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 14 Winner’s bracket semifinals Jefferson City-Marshall winner vs. California-Boonville winner, 6 p.m. Southern Boone-Battle winner vs. Fulton-Fatima winner, 6 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 15 Fifth-place game TBD, 6 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 16 Third-place game TBD, 3 p.m. TBD, 6 p.m. Championship game South Callaway Invitational AT HIGH SCHOOL (HS), MIDDLE SCHOOL (MS) MONDAY, JAN. 11 First-round games No. 1 Owensville vs. No. 8 Russellville, 6 p.m. (HS) No. 4 South Callaway vs. N0. 5 New Haven, 7:30 p.m. (HS) No. 2 Hermann vs. No. 7 South Callaway, 6 p.m. (MS) No. 3 New Bloomfield vs. No. 6 Montgomery County, 7:30 p.m. (MS) WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13 Winner’s bracket semifinals Owensville-Russellville winner vs. South Callaway-New Haven winner, 6 p.m. (HS) Hermann-South Callaway winner vs. New Bloomfield-Montgomery County winner, 7:30 p.m. (HS) Loser’s bracket semifinals Owensville-Russellville loser vs. South Callaway-New Haven loser, 6 p.m. (MS) Hermann-South Callaway loser vs. New Bloomfield-Montgomery County loser, 7:30 p.m. (MS) FRIDAY, JAN. 15 Seventh-place game TBD, 6 p.m. (MS) Fifth-place game TBD, 6 p.m. (HS) SATURDAY, JAN. 16 Third-place game TBD, 1 p.m. (HS) Championship game TBD, 4 p.m. (HS) Eldon Tournament AT ELDON MIDDLE SCHOOL, UNLESS NOTED THURSDAY, JAN. 28 First-round games California vs. North Tech, 4:30 p.m. Carl Junction vs. O’Fallon Christian, 6 p.m. Eldon vs. Fox JV, 7:30 p.m. Fox vs. Hogan Prep, 9 p.m. FRIDAY, JAN. 29 Loser’s bracket semifinals Eldon-Fox JV loser vs. Fox-Hogan Prep loser, 4:30 p.m. California-North Tech loser vs. Carl Junction-O’Fallon Christian loser, 6 p.m. Winner’s bracket semifinals Eldon-Fox JV winner vs. Fox-Hogan Prep winner, 7:30 p.m. California-North Tech winner vs. Carl Junction-O’Fallon Christian winner, 9 p.m. SATURDAY, JAN. 30 Seventh-place game TBD, 11:30 a.m. Fifth-place game TBD, 11:30 a.m. (at Eldon High School) Third-place game TBD, 2:30 p.m. (at Eldon High School) Championship game TBD, 5:30 p.m. (at Eldon High School) Preps Gary Filbert Classic AT MEXICO HIGH SCHOOL Saturday, Jan. 2 Paris 54, Silex 24 (girls) Jamestown 55, Silex 24 (boys) Community 48, Jamestown 42 (girls) Paris 61, Community 54 (boys) Warrenton 40, Mexico 39 (girls) St. Dominic 60, Mexico 54 (boys) MFA Oil/Break Time Shootout AT MIZZOU ARENA, COLUMBIA Saturday, Jan. 23 Noon — Glasgow vs. Salisbury (boys) 1:30 p.m. — Iberia vs. Harrisburg (boys) 3 p.m. — Mid-Buchanan vs. Oak Grove (boys) 4:30 p.m. — Father Tolton vs. Vianney (boys) 6 p.m. — Jefferson City vs. Battle (boys) 7:30 p.m. — Boonville vs. Chillicothe (girls) 9 p.m. — Boonville vs. Southern Boone (boys) MidMoClassifieds.com MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 To place an ad, call Index Announcements Employment Transportation Merchandise Financial Real Estate Rent Mobile Home Real Estate Sale Legal/Public Notice 761-0226 or email class@newstribune.com freeads 3 days - 2 lines 60-90 170-180 200-280 300-615 650-660 730-810 840-860 890-954 964-980 Publish 3 days Mon. - Sat. Deadlines (with a 5 day wait) Monday Edition 3:30 p.m. Friday Items priced at $20,000 or less Order at Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Friday Editions 2:00 p.m. the Previous Day Saturday Edition 10:00 a.m. Friday Sunday Edition newstribune.com 2:00 p.m. Friday Legal & Display Deadlines Available Upon Request or fax to 634-7433 Banner Photos We welcome your submissions for use in our classified banner. Please submit your high resolution files to class@ newstribune.com. Please be sure to include your name and a brief description of the photo. Rates apply to private party customers. Some stipulations apply. Photos submitted by Lisa Zimmer - Sunset Circulation Support Manager ANNOUNCEMENTS 080 Special Notices ACCOUNTING ASSISTANT Reporting to the Finance Director, this position manages accounting functions, including cash receipts and accounts payable; administers approved accounting policies and procedures for the YMCA; and assists in the preparation of complete and accurate monthly and annual financial statements. Bachelor's degree in accounting or finance and three years of experience or more in an accounting role required. Candidate should be proficient with QuickBooks and Excel. This is a parttime position of approximately 20 hours per week at a rate of $20/hour. Application deadline is January 15, 2016 with immediate availability. Mail application with resume: Jefferson City Area YMCA, ATTN: Office Manager, P.O. Box 104176, Jefferson City, MO 65110-4176. We're simply looking for volunteers with a desire to help abused & neglected children Your involvement will make a direct impact on a child's life. Phone 573-690-9171 Dr. James Kellerman www.CapitalCityCasa.org Donations accepted Blair Oaks R-II School District 6124 Falcon Lane Jefferson City, MO 65101 095 Found FOUND: Reddish white puppy between Eugene & Henley. 291-8808 District Vacancies 2015-2016 School Year EMPLOYMENT Full-Time Special Services Aide Food Service (Part Time) 170 Help Wanted ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS at Show Me Child Care for full time 2 year old teacher, 8-5. Contact Julie or Kelcie to set up time for interview at 761-9998. Contact: District Office Phone: (573) 636-2020 Harry's Place Cafeteria is looking for hardworking & reliable cafeteria workers - all positions. No nights, no weekends. Apply in person, 4th Floor, Truman Bldg., Jefferson City. Access www.cs-business.com For area job opportunities ACCOUNTANT CANTEEN SERVICE now hiring full/part time cooks and cashiers, Mon. - Fri., for Ameren cafeteria. Apply at 2732 Merchants, Jefferson City. 573-635-4961 A growing CPA firm is looking for a CPA or an Accountant with a Bachelors Degree in Accounting or Masters of Accountancy or 150 hour Masters Equivalency required for the CPA exam on the path to become a CPA. Public accounting experience preferred. Proficiency in MS Office & various personal computer applications along with excellent communication and organizational skills are a must. Full time position with excellent benefits package. Pay commensurate with experience and professional certifications. Send resume to P.O. Box 6855, Jefferson City, MO 65102. Equipment Technician The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) is seeking to fill an Equipment Technician position with our Jefferson City Garage. This position must be proficient in collision repair and refinishing. An Associates of Applied Science degree in Automotive Collision Technology is preferred or an Associate's Degree in automotive technology, auto mechanics or diesel mechanics, or completion of a formal post-secondary technical training program in automobile or heavy equipment repair. Candidates should possess a valid Class A CDL with tanker endorsement and no air brake restrictions, and valid vehicle inspection license. Advertising Graphic Designer Full Time Position Excellent Career Opportunity Design and layout magazine publications and other advertising design work. Manage multiple projects from concept through completion with tight deadlines. Coordinate with printers and other vendors throughout the production process. Please submit a cover letter (including salary requirements) and resume. sandra@imapartners.com Or, mail to: Imagemark Marketing & Advertising 608 Beck Street, Jefferson City, MO 65109 Applications can be submitted online at www.modot.org CANTEEN SERVICE now hiring Cook/Manager, Mon. - Fri., 5 a.m.-1 p.m. Apply at 2732 Merchants, Jefferson City. 573-635-4961 Central Missouri Newspapers Inc. is currently seeking a self motivated, reliable, and detail oriented individual to support Circulation activities of newspapers to our customers and vendors. This position will assist our District Manager staff with sales efforts, delivery of newspapers, and training contract carriers. Additional responsibilities would include auditing and maintaining routes to ensure profitability for both CMNI and contracted carriers. This is a temporary position working 30-35 hours/week with the possibility to become Full-Time. Starting Wage is $10/hour. To be considered you must have reliable transportation, proof of insurance, and a valid driver's license. Prior delivery experience preferred. Overnight hours with weekend availability are required. Email resume to mjohns@newstribune.com, complete an application at 210 Monroe St, Jefferson City Mo, or mail your resume to the Jefferson City News Tribune, PO Box 1605, Jefferson City, MO 65102 DRIVER/MAILROOM Class E CDL License or better required. Duties include delivering and unloading printed material, forklift operation and work in our Mailroom. Pick up application at rear entrance of News Tribune, 2130 Schotthill Woods Rd., Jefferson City. Like To Travel? Jefferson City-based company seeks individual to assist with environmental training program. Weekday travel within U.S. Must have mechanical aptitude. Job specific training is provided. Retirees welcome. Email resume to: info@aeromet.org HUMAN RESOURCES REPRESENTATIVE Jefferson City company looking for experienced Human Resources Representative. Prefer HR degree or 5 years equivalent work experience. Responsibilities include multi-state payroll processing, benefits administration including ACA requirements, and training. Position requires extensive use of Excel, Word, COBRA, payroll, and timekeeping software. preferential consideration will be given to individual with Crystal Report writing experience. Detail oriented, logical, and methodical in approaching problem solving. We offer a competitive salary, insurance (health, dental, vision, life, disability, etc.), vacation, and 401(k). Send resume with salary requirement to: File 3120, c/o News Tribune, 210 Monroe St., Jefferson City, MO 65101 MANAGER Courtesy Loans is accepting applications for Manager in Jefferson City. Must enjoy working with the public and be goal oriented. We offer competitive salaries and benefits with a bonus program. Please email resume to: myresume2014@yahoo.com or mail to: HR Department P.O. Box 7043, Columbia, MO 65205. Could you use an Early morning deliveries; routes completed by 5:30 a.m. Mon-Fri, and 7 a.m. Sat and Sun. EXTRA $1000 or more each month Job Opening The Moniteau County Soil and Water Conservation District is looking to fill the position of District Specialist I. This position is responsible for performing technical duties for the Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) & Natural Resources Conservation Services (NRCS) providing technical assistance to district landowners and cooperators in the preservation of water quality and soil erosion. Applicant would be required to work outdoors in all types of weather and possibly rough terrain as well as in the office. Computer skills, good public relation skills, mathematical skills, mechanical skills, GPS and survey equipment knowledge are desirable for this position. A high school diploma or equivalent is required, college is beneficial. Salary based on experience, with room for advancement. Benefit Package. Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable vehicle and pass a Federal background check. Applications and position descriptions available at the Moniteau County SWCD Office in the USDA Service Center, 410 W Buchanan St, California MO 65018, by phone 573-796-2010 ext. 3 or email nancy.kirby@swcd.mo.gov. Applications or resumes accepted through 4:00 p.m. January 11, 2016. EOE JOURNEYMAN PLUMBER Call for details. 573-469-8612. Newspaper Routes Available The Jefferson City News Tribune currently has a newspaper delivery routes available in Wardsville area. The route is an independent contract route, delivered 7 days a week and requires a dependable customer service oriented person who would enjoy working a few hours each morning. Proof of reliable transportation, proof of insurance, and a valid driver's license are required before contracting. The route is for overnight delivery before 5:30 a.m. Monday through Friday, and before 7:00 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Please contact News Tribune customer service, 573-636-3132, for more information. Part Time Office Cleaning 2-3 hours late afternoons, late evenings 10 p.m. - 1 a.m., or after 5 p.m. weekdays. Good references required. Couples and retired persons welcome. 573-636-3111 PART-TIME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT $11 - $13.50 Do you have a positive attitude, conduct yourself in a professional manner and have a predictable schedule, with the ability to work between 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. on weekdays? Consider joining our team at the Missouri Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons in Jefferson City! Duties will include guest/member relations, office operations and duties as assigned. Cover letters and resumes can be submitted via email to HollyK@maops.org, Attn: Holly. Position will remain open until filled. ROEDEL CLEANING Looking for experienced cleaners for part time overnight & evening hours. Positions start as soon as possible. Apply at 204 E. Franklin St., Jefferson City. 634-9098 Earn Weekly Bonuses Try Delivering the Must have valid driver’s license and proof of insurance So many people have discovered the benefits of being a carrier. It’s a part time job that easily fits in your schedule without compromising your family or school time. JOHNNY'S PIZZA & STEAKHOUSE is now hiring servers & dishwashers. Please apply in person between 2:30-4:30 p.m. Mon. - Fri. at 2102 MO Blvd. No phone calls, please. Sports Reporter Why not start the new year off with a new job? The California Democrat, a weekly newspaper in Central Missouri, is looking for a community reporter who will primarily cover high school sports, as well as some feature/community news. We're looking for someone who loves to report, write and has photo skills. If interested, drop us an e-mail immediately. The job search ends Jan. 15. Send a cover letter, resume, work samples and references to Managing Editor Gary Castor at gary@newstribune.com. The News Tribune is currently accepting applications for day and night production workers. Hours vary. Drug screening required. Serious applicants only. Apply in person, News Tribune, 2130 Schotthill Woods Rd., Jefferson City. Go to the back door & ring door bell. WANTED: Someone qualified to hang large sliding door on barn. Call 573-219-6629. Daily Specials DAISY DELIGHT RESTAURANT 2715 E. McCarty - (573)-635-1221 Grilled Cheese, 12 oz. Soup or Chili 573-636-3132 $6.25 RACHEL’S DOWNTOWN DINER 127 E. High Street – (573) 415-2480 7:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m., 7 days a week. Serving Breakfast ALL DAY! Fried Shrimp Salad $7.95 210 MONROE STREET Weekend Relief What if you could fit a whole week's worth of work into just two days? We are seeking an outgoing, positive person who will be committed to providing supports to adults with developmental disabilities who is willing and able to work through the weekend. Must be attentive to detail, passionate about helping others, and a dynamic self-starter. A great fit for students and commuters from outside Columbia City limits! High School Diploma or GED required. Woodhaven supports a diverse workplace. EOE. Pre-Employment drug screen required. Apply for this and other open positions at our Job Fair on 1/5 from 12-4 at 1405 Hathman Place. Visit: woodhaventeam.org/opportunities for more information SCHOLASTIC JOB Opportunities Job Line 632-1787 www.scholastic.com 16 oz. drink Must be available 7 days a week Call D1 Y-CARE SITE ASSISTANT $9.00/hour. Mon.-Fri. 6:45-8:30 a.m. and/or 3-5:30 p.m. Must be 18 years old and enjoy working with children. Great part-time opportunity for college students. YMCA Membership included with employment. Direct applications to Office Manager, P.O. Box 104176, Jefferson City, MO 65110. 171 Help Wanted - Medical Bee at Home Is looking for: CNAs, CMAs, Home Health Aides Call 573-634-8280 or website: beeathome@beeathomellc.com to apply 174 Help Wanted - Drivers OPIES TRANSPORT Hiring Class A OTR Drivers 800-341-9963 OpiesTransport.com ROUTE DRIVER Canteen Service has an opening for a full-time route driver. Apply in person, 2732 Merchants Drive, Jefferson City, Mon. - Fri., 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. To include your Special of the Day Fax Specials by 3:00 p.m. Thursday to 634-7433 or Contact Sierra at 761-0274 or sierra@newstribune.com Cost: $25 per week Daily Specials will be printed Monday - Friday OSCAR’S CLASSIC DINER 2118 Schotthill Woods Dr. – (573) 659-0006 CLOSED TODAY! Reserve our new Banquet Room for Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner meetings, and parties ~ any day of the week. In a Rush? Call ahead and use our Drive-up Window for Carry-Out. WELCOME INN AGAIN 130 E. Dunklin St. - (573)-616-2113 3 piece mixed Chicken Dinner (All White regular price) 3 piece Ham Dinner OR Tenderloin Dinner All include mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, your choice of coleslaw or applesauce and bread & butter Monday CLASSIFIED D2 Monday, January 4, 2016 Truck Drivers Wanted for Ready-Mix. Must be 21 or older. Industry knowledge preferred. Must be able to lift 50 lbs., and physically able to safely climb up and down a ladder; operate equipment, tools and controls; perform repetitive movements with hands, wrists and feet and other requirements as needed but not described herein. Applicant must hold a valid Class A or Class B CDL with airbrakes endorsement and is required to maintain a clean driving record. Applicant must pass pre-employment criminal background check, DOT Physical, FCE, Drug Screen and Motor Vehicle Report. Prefer applicant to apply in person. ConAgg of MO, LLC (Columbia Ready Mix Division), 2604 N. Stadium Blvd., Columbia, MO. Hiring for the Spring 2016 Season, reviews will begin early January 2016 through late February 2016. TRANSPORTATION 210 Auto Accessories/Tires CAR DOLLY, $150 680-4789 230 Autos For Sale BUICK LESABRE LIMITED, 2005, 3.8 liter, 6 cylinder, 180K. Taking offers: minimum offer $1,325. 400 East Miller St., Jefferson City, MO. 573-636-5338 Sale date & time: 1/6/2016, 2:30 p.m. CHEVROLET IMPALA, 2014, Sedan 4door, LTZ V6, 29,000 mile, $28,500. Please call 573-230-7522. WHIRLPOOL DUET WASHER & DRYER, front loading, white. $700/pair, drawer stands included. LG refrigerator/freezer, stainless steel. $800. 573-680-3482 340 Baby/Children’s Items Safety First Car Seat, (expiries 2018), $35. 584-9977 440 Farm Equipment/Trailers 5 X 12 Trailer with ramps and tool box $850. 660-849-9361 450 Firewood/Chainsaws 11 a all seasoned split oak firewood, $45. Pickup load. 680-0074 11A BEST IN TOWN OAK, seasoned, split, $75/load. Can Deliver. 893-8366 470 Free for Free Please Submit Free Ads to: class@newstribune.com or News Tribune P.O. Box 420 Jefferson City, MO 65102 CHEVROLET S10, 2003, mechanically sound, bedliner, new tires, 109K, 25 m.p.g., $4500. 573-418-4640 For a flat rate of $25 you get: DODGE RAM 1500, 2003, HEMI, 2x4, black, regular cab, 119k miles, new 10-plys, $5,600. 870-623-6602 Your ad will run in the: Sell it For $25 • 4 Lines of Text • 1 Color Picture • 155,000 Readers • News Tribune • Fulton Sun • California Democrat • The Lake Today • Sun Advertiser • Tribune Review AND all 4 websites for one week! Call Today! 761-0226 or email to class@newstribune.com One Item per ad - No Refunds terms apply 20+ Puppies - Non-Shed! Toy Aussies, Hava Poo, Shih Tzu, Peka Poo, Chihuahua, Havanese, Golden Doodle, Schnauzers, more. Osage Beach - 11-5 daily, 573-348-5400 573-280-7277 BLUE PIT BULL PUPPIES, CKC/UDAR registered, 2 females, 1 male, $350-$400, registered, Available now! 573-353-2418 GREAT PYRENEES KOMONDOR CROSS PUPPIES. Born in November. Raised with goats. Vaccinated and dewormed. 573-796-4414 POMERANIAN, female, 3 years old, housebroken, $150. 573-619-4154 REGISTERED PUREBRED YORKIES, females $400, males $300 firm. 573-646-3320 490 Hay/Grain/Feed FESCUE HAY, large bales, net wrapped, $35/bale. 573-619-1117 RENTALS 730 Apartments For Rent ** 2 BEDROOMS ** 510 Jewelry/Watches WE BUY GOLD Our customers tell us we pay the highest price in town. The Blue Diamond 634-4241 www.thebluediamond.com 520 Lawn & Garden JOHN DEERE BLADE, fits 420, $375. 680-4789 fits 530 Livestock/Horses SimAngus and Simmental Black Registered Bulls. AI sires with calving ease. 573-291-3082 550 Merchandise Wanted To Buy ROPER WASHER big capacity. MAYTAG DRYER, $100/each. 573-634-7857 SCHRIMPF MANAGEMENT Our leasing service is at no cost to you! 1 & 2 bedroom apartments Studio & efficiency apartments 2 & 3 bedroom townhomes Duplexes, condominiums & homes Locations throughout Jefferson City and surrounding areas Professional maintenance staff Call Us First For Your Next Apartment or Home! 1001 Madison 636-3171 www.schrimpfmg.com Always buying antiques, estates, old furniture, whole households. Southside Furniture, 573-690-2823. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, trash paid, no steps, $475. Newer 2 bedroom, 2 bath with garage & patio, West, $595. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, loft apartment, hardwoods, private parking, $745. Schrimpf Management 1001 Madison 636-3171 1 & 2 BEDROOMS TIMBERLINE APARTMENTS Short Term Lease Accepted Electric Whirlpool Appliances, $355-$415 furnished or unfurnished By Hwy. 50 & Mo. Blvd. No pets. Low utilities, laundry facilities. 219 Dix Rd., Apartment 6, 635-8033 1 BEDROOM, includes washer & dryer, water/sewer/trash paid, $450. Deposit $450. No pets, 309 E. Ashley St. 573-301-5068 PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, in Wardsville across from church, $475 + deposit. Must have good credit. 573-680-3076 2 BEDROOM, 1.5 bath units available now. Close to the mall. Washer & dryer hookups, $500 + deposit. Call 338-8888. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, large rooms, 1100 sq. ft., covered deck, newly remodeled, Holts Summit. 659-0573 2 BEDROOM, $400 - $425. 573-230-8206 2 Bedroom Apartments, large rooms, very clean, freshly painted. Starting at $400. 761-7404. camelotjcmo.com 2 BEDROOM, Holts Summit, water, sewer, trash paid. 573-680-7815 2 bedroom, near mall, no pets, available Jan. 1. 694-6104, 477-3437 2 BEDROOMS, fresh paint & new flooring, water, sewer, trash paid. In Russellville, $300 deposit, rent $395. 417-777-1440 3 OR 4 B E D R O O M S Newer 1550 sq. ft. Apartments 2 baths, 1908 Saratoga Blvd., $775. 659-1961 !A Place To Call Home! 1, 2, 3 Bedroom Apartments Townhomes & Duplexes Capitol City Property Management 573-893-5759 or 694-9398 Publisher's Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. Featured on our Internet site at www.newstribune.com See color photos along with detailed information on area apartments. For advertising information, please call the News Tribune Classified Department 636-3131. Apartments, Houses, Duplexes $350-$950 EXCELLENT Maintenance Service on call 24/7 FOR SHOWINGS: Sandra @ 573-694-6572 573-694-4014 Check us out on Facebook! www.adrianenterprises@gmail.com CEDAR RIDGE APARTMENTS 2 bedrooms, $376. 3 bedrooms, $422-$450. Water, sewer, & trash paid. Income guidelines and student restrictions apply. 635-4557 EXPERT SERVICES 122 Education/Tutoring 106 Auto Services & Repair AUTOMOBILE DETAILING Complete Holiday Special Bumper to Bumper Detail. Starting at $99. Call Gary Willibrand, 573-821-6047 110 Child Care Let's have fun and learn together. Hot lunch, 2 snacks. 636-7677 114 Concrete/Asphalt FOUNDATION REPAIR & WATERPROOFING Leaking, cracking, or sinking, basement and crawl space repair, free estimates, licensed and insured. Midwest Basement Tech, 35 years' experience, 573-693-9448 ALL REMOVAL & HAULING 1 item, room, shed or whole house full. Or cleanup. Free estimates. Licensed & Insured. 573-418-5895 133 Home Improvement Locally owned & operated. Established in 2014. Hands on driver training. When safety counts, you can count on us. Call for an appointment today, we come to you. 573-201-0665 or 573-694-1990. ALL TYPES of home improvements: baths, family rooms, deck, concrete work, etc. 35 years experience. Call 573-619-6284. Major cards accepted. Bathtub & Tile Repair Porcelain & fiberglass. Over 30 years experience, free estimates. 498-3402 Handyman: Carpentry, repairs, power washing, gutter cleaning. 378-1016 130 Hauling/Cleanup 1A Clean up, in/out of home, hauling off anything, yard work. 893-8366 HAYDEN PAINTING Interior & exterior. FREE estimates. 634-4052 deVille Southwest Properties 1, 2, & 3 bedroom apartments & townhomes 839 Southwest Blvd., 573-635-0613 www.devillesw.com 135 House/Office Cleaning *****AN EYE FOR DETAIL***** Locally Owned...Great References... Affordable...Free Estimates! 573-864-5822 Kauffman Window Cleaning Get your windows cleaned before the holidays. Reliable, competitive rates, quality service. 680-8508 138 Lawn Care/Landscaping AJ LAWN CARE - 619-5644 Snow Removal. Leaf Removal and Fall Cleanup. Call for Bids & Pricing NOLAN ENTERPRISES *Fall Aeration Overseeding *Leaf Removal *Gutter Cleaning *Power Washing. 694-8523 4 bedroom. 3 bath. 2300 sq. ft., garage, 4910 Angelia $995. 353-2706 HIDDEN OAKS APARTMENTS 2 bedroom 2 bath apartments 839 Southwest Blvd., 573-636-4964 www.devillesw.com IMMEDIATE VACANCY Greenway Village Inc. Holts Summit 1 bedroom available Rent based on income For application, contact Associated Management & Leasing 636-239-6656 *toll free 1-866-406-6656 EXECUTIVE CONDO for rent, lease or sale. 2 story, 3-5 bedroom, 4.5 baths, 2 car garage. Fireplace, hardwoods, stainless appliances. Central location with pool. 680-1570 ** HOMES - CALL US FIRST! ** • 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, central location, nice yard & deck, $645. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, with rec This institution is an equal opportunity provider & employer. NEW 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 1 car garage, West, Pioneer Trail school. Close to Binder park, $805. 573-690-4377 • • • • APARTMENT GUIDE www.MidMoCareers.com lets Courtyards @ Cherry Creek 2 bedroom, 2 bath Internet, cable TV & trash paid Clubhouse, heated pool Furnished units available $875 & up - call now! 690-1818 1 BEDROOM LOFT, 1016 W. High, water/sewer/trash. $395. 645-3219 575 Pets & Supplies RECLINER, brown power recliner, $500. 619-0701 JOHN DEERE BLADES, 425-445-450, $725. 680-4789 ** 1 CALL - WE HAVE IT ALL! ** Wood Kindlin Box for Firewood - $25. 584-9977 CHEVROLET S10, 1998, 200,000 miles, 5 speed, asking $800 cash. 660-849-9361 Appliances for sale. ALSO, DO REPAIRS. Will haul off appliances. 573-796-2711 or 353-9376. NO Money down on 8,10, or 12 wides throughout January on Rent To Own Contracts. Ordered or Delivered now, Payments start in March. Free local delivery! No credit checks! Outdoor Rec, Hwy 54, Fulton 573-544-5208 OLD TRAIN SET as is $165 cash only no check. Rattlesnake by Frederic Remington, bronze statue 9", $150 cash only. 573-635-2470 2 PEDESTOOL OAK TABLE, 6 chairs, excellent condition, 573-690-3419 320 Appliances NEVER MAIL CHECKS, CASH OR WIRE MONEY TO ANYONE WHO CALLS IN RESPONSE TO AN AD Many that offer to send a check in exchange for you wiring money are scams. Please be on guard. A public service message from the News Tribune X300 JOHN DEERE, 48" cut, new, used only 10 hours, $3,000. 573-498-3749 240 Trucks For Sale MERCHANDISE LATTICE CARDY UGG BOOTS, gray, brand new, size 8, $70. 573-642-8284 UTILITY TRAILER, 4x8 with 2' sides, $275. 573-659-7804 or 602-571-9009 480 Furniture WINNEBAGO TOUR, 2006, 40 feet long, Model M-40KD, 3 Slideouts, very good condition. New Michelin tires, sleep number air mattress & 2 flat screen TV's installed last year. 350 CAT engine, Allison Transmission. 4500 KW Generator, Rear View Monitor. Leather upholstery. Wood & Carpeted flooring. Central Vacuum. Combination washer & dryer. Two propane furnaces. Basement A/C. Propane/electric Appliances. Auto leveling. Priced at $97,000, $10,000 below average Kelly Bluebook Price. Call 573/893-6381 if interested. Handmade Wooden Rocking Horse $50. 584-9977 KIOT TRACTOR WITH LOADER, 30 horsepower, Shutte drive, 68 hours. Graesle's. 573-634-2449 KIA OPTIMA LX, 2009, Low 43,000 miles! Black, tinted, new tires, $9000. 573-690-4618 270 Recreational Vehicles/Campers 560 Miscellaneous For Sale 100 shares of class B Central Bank stock. $400 per share. Must take all 100 shares. 573-634-2735. PEPPERTREE APARTMENTS 2 bedroom, 1 bath - $445 Private Deck/Balcony Water, Sewer, Trash included Cats accepted. Quiet area. 690-1818 Call or Text Quiet 3 Bedroom Townhouse, 2 bath, hookups, 1 car garage, West, no pets/no smoking. Credit check. Senior Discount! $675, 573-230-4641. Remodeled 2 bedroom, split level, 1.5 bath, new appliances, Gray Fox Terrace, $450-495. No pets. 635-2322 740 Duplexes For Rent ** DUPLEXES ** 2 bedroom, 2 bath, with garage, large rooms, no steps, West, $595. New 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 car garage, West, patio, $695. Newer 3 bedroom, 2 bath, custom cabinets, patio, no steps, $795. Huge 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, hardwood floors, no steps, $895 Schrimpf Management 1001 Madison 636-3171 www.schrimpfmg.com 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, trash paid, nice lower level, $495. No pets please. 2503 Foxbar Terrace. 395-4113 2 BEDROOM, East, rec room, no pets, deposit, $450. 636-7097 room & garage, West, $645. Schrimpf Management 1001 Madison 636-3171 www.schrimpfmg.com Nice 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, family room, 1 car garage, fenced backyard, Bagnall Dr., $685. Gold Star Realty & Enterprises LLC 573-378-5560. For rental information, please call 573-659-5166. This Is A Must See! 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 car garage, full finished basement $900.00, Rustic Ln. Gold Star Realty & Enterprises LLC 573-378-5560, For rental information, please call 573-659-5166. 755 Mobile Homes For Rent 2 & 3 bedroom mobile homes for rent, Jefferson City area. No pets. $425 - $500. 635-3339 2 or 3 bedroom for rent, lease or sale, possible owner finance. 573-896-4303 3 & 2 BEDROOM, HOMES. Section 8 welcome. 573-489-1960 or 573-489-4825 For rent, lease or sale: Double wide in Holts Summit. 896-4303 MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT, RENTTO-OWN, OR PURCHASE, starting at $375. For details: www.mylowcosthousing.com or 866-686-2066. Nice Rural Country Setting on blacktop. Enjoy a fall evening on your covered deck, 3 bedroom, 2 bath modular home with open floor plan. 30792 Hwy. E, Clarksburg, Mo. $500. 573-659-5166 756 Mobile Home Lots For Rent 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, 2 car garage, large rooms, no steps, gallery entry, good north Jefferson City neighborhood, $800/month. 573-896-4888 Available nice mobile home or RV sites in Jefferson City. 635-3339 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, rec room, 1800 sq. ft., Clara Dr. $625-$650. 636-4500 GORDON REAL ESTATE 407 Jefferson St., 6,000 sq. ft. 573-353-8990/GORDONJC.COM 3 BEDROOM, 3 bath, garage, 2100 sq. ft., 1233 Duane Swift. 690-3400 3 BEDROOM, West end, 2.5 bath, 1 car garage, private patio, 2 story ceilings. $750. 635-1722 DUPLEX, 2 bedrooms with garage, Riverside Dr. No pets. $475/month. 573-634-2950 750 Homes For Rent !Realty of Jefferson City, MO, Inc. Nice selection of homes and duplexes. For more information go to: www.actionrealtyrentals.com 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, all new updates, close to Capitol, $600/month. 634-2755 780 Office Space For Rent !KOLB PROPERTIES! OFFICE-RETAIL-WAREHOUSE-LAND Commercial Property for sale or lease. Large or small, we have it all. See at www.kolbproperties.com CALL 893-7320 790 Retail/Warehouse Space !RETAIL SPACE! OFFICE SPACE WAREHOUSE SPACE Call for details & availability Schrimpf Management, Inc. 1001 Madison St. (573) 636-3171 A MINI-STORAGE: 5x10, 10x10, 10x15, 10x20, 10x30, 12x36x16 tall 4 miles East of MO River bridge on Hwy. 54. 896-9996 or 645-5864 (cell). METRO MINI STORAGE 5x10, 10x10, 10x20, 20x20 Call 893-6227 2000+ sq. ft., 2 car garage, brick rancher. Large lot, $850. 573-896-4303 Ravenwood Storage 10x24-$60 21x 24-$110. 12x24-$80. 690-7061 3 bedroom, 1 bath, Moreland Ave., $690/month. 573-797-0338 REAL ESTATE 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 1 garage, on Idlewood, water paid, inside like new, $900. 353-1934 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath rancher near Belair School, 2 car garage, $850/month. No smoking, no pets. 573-462-9677 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 bath, completely remodeled, 1 car garage plus car port, no pets, large yard. $895/month. 573-644-4636 900 Commercial Property BY OWNER: Over 6000 sq. ft. bldg., coded for child care (babies & up) or retail store, $295,000. 573-690-9991 930 Homes For Sale Open Floor Plan! Dedicated office & family room, gas fireplace, partially fenced backyard, set up for daycare. Denise Payne - Weichert Realtors First Tier, 573- 777-7274. 3 BEDROOM, $550 - $600. 573-230-8206 DARLING HOME! Many upgrades, solid brick home, storage, and coal shed - Bedroom 3 is entire upstairs, own master bath! 573-777-7274 4 BEDROOM, 2 full baths, family room, hardwood floors, deck, clean, close to East End Wal-Mart, 2961 E. McCarty, $895. 230-7901 VERY CLEAN HOME House is in great shape & great neighborhood, 1023 Hawthorne Parkway, $105,000. 573-680-3076 Rob's Landscaping 694-4777 SNOW BOBCAT & TRACKHOE SERVICE Tree Trim & Removal/Stump Grinding Powerwashing, Aeration/overseed 148 Painting/Wallpapering PAINTING/STAINING Interior & Exterior Custom Painting & Staining. Pressure washing & much more. Gold Seal Painting. 529-1983 154 Roofing/Gutters !BILL'S ROOFING Serving Jefferson City for over 30 years. It's how we do, what we do. Call 636-8433 160 Tree Services Alford Tree Service Quality Service, Reasonable Rates. 30 years experience. *Trimming *Removals *Stump Removals. Licensed, insured. Free estimates. Check us out on Facebook for 25% off coupon. Serving all of Central MO. 893-5967 Feeling a Crunch on your wallet? Check out the CLASSIFIEDS! CLASSIFIED/FEATURES MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Husband who’s aiding ex-lover appears to be helping himself 219 Rock Beacon Rd. - $114,900 Check out this 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath home with family room, fireplace, fenced yard and more. For additional information and pictures www.MariannePollock.com or call Marianne at Associated Real Estate Group 632-8600. 420 Summerhill - $314,900 Great 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath home on an acre lot in Jefferson City School District. For additional information and pictures www.MariannePollock.com or call Marianne at Associated Real Estate Group 632-8600 940 Lots For Sale Lots for business or homes. Owner/broker Betty Steck, 893-2963. 942 Mobile Homes For Sale 2 or 3 bedroom for sale. Possible owner finance. 573-896-4303 For rent, lease or sale: Double wide in Holts Summit. 896-4303 Loose Creek area, vinyl shingle, 2x6, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, small down payment and approx. $250/month. 573-896-4303 945 Resort/Lake/River Property Lake Ozark consider offers or trade. 50/Acres 2,500' flat shoreline $300/ft. 1k'/$375K .100'/$65k. 573-257-0123 PUBLIC NOTICES 970 Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF COLE COUNTY, MISSOURI PROBATE DIVISION In the matter of: ELNORA MAE BARBOUR, INCAP. DISABLED. Estate No: 14AC-PR00100 NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF A CONSERVATOR TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF ELNORA MAE BARBOUR, A DISABLED PERSON. On the 14th day of December, 2015, MARILYN SCHMUTLZER was appointed conservator of the estate of ELNORA MAE BARBOUR, a person adjudicated disabled under the laws of Missouri by the Probate Division of the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri. The address of the conservator’s attorney is: 301 EAST HIGH STREET, JEFFERSON CITY, MO 65102. All creditors of said disabled person are notified to file their claims in the Probate Division of the Circuit Court. Deanna Nilges Clerk of the Probate Division of the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri N.T. Dec. 21, 28, 2015; Jan. 4, 11, 2016 NOTICE CONCERNING A TRUST NOTICE TO CREDITORS BY TRUSTEE: Estate of Charles R. Willibrand To all persons interested in the estate of Charles R. Willibrand, decedent, whose last known address was 416 Valley View Court, Jefferson City, Missouri 65109. Peggy A. Kolb, John C. Willibrand, and Phyllis Willibrand are acting as Trustees under a trust, the terms of which provide that the debts of the decedent may be paid by the trustee upon receipt of proper proof thereof. The address for the Trustees is 425 Valley View Court, Jefferson City, Missouri 65109. All creditors of the decedent are notified to present their claims to the undersigned within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or be forever barred. Date of first publication is January 4, 2016. Tabitha L. Atwell, Attorney for the Trust N.T. Jan. 4, 11, 18, 25, 2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE For default in the payment of debt secured by a deed of trust executed by Cole M. Henry, dated October 30, 2008, and recorded on November 3, 2008, Document No. 200811539, in Book No. 569, at Page 145 in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds, Cole County, Missouri, the undersigned Successor Trustee will on January 15, 2016, at 2:00 PM, at the South Door of the Cole County Courthouse, Jefferson City, Missouri, sell at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash: Lot No. 2, Estates Southwest, per plat of record in Plat Book 9, Page 61, Cole County Recorder's Office; said Estates Southwest, being a Subdivision of part of the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 19, township 44 North, Range 12 West., commonly known as 4215 Charlane Drive, Jefferson City, MO, 65109 subject to all prior easements, restrictions, reservations, covenants and encumbrances now of record, if any, to satisfy the debt and costs. SouthLaw, P.C. f/k/a South & Associates, P.C., Successor Trustee First Publication: December 21, 2015. For more information, visit www.southlaw.com NOTICE Pursuant to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. §1692c(b), no information concerning the collection of this debt may be given without the prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt collector or the express permission of a court of competent jurisdiction. The debt collector is attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose Casefile No. 179444-768259. N.T. Dec. 21, 28, 2015; Jan. 4, 11, 2016 D3 AP Ridley Scott, right, presents the Chairman’s award to Matt Damon at the 27th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Gala on Saturday in Palm Springs, California. At Palm Springs festival Damon leads Oscar charge for Ridley Scott PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) — Matt Damon launched a bold new phase of Oscar campaigning for his “The Martian” director on Saturday, telling a crowd that Ridley Scott has “given more than enough to cinema” over his career to deserve an Academy Award. Damon spoke at the opening night gala for the Palm Springs International Film Festival, a non-televised black-tie dinner at the desert city’s convention center. It’s become a well-attended stop on the busy Hollywood awards circuit due to its timing during the Oscar nominations voting period and eight days before the Golden Globe Awards. Honorees Johnny Depp, Cate Blanchett, Christian Bale and Michael Fassbender also took the stage. Damon said he was shocked to discover that the 78-year-old director of “Blade Runner” and “Alien” had never won an Oscar despite three nominations and his helming of 2001 best picture winner “Gladiator.” “He’s just a master director. There are a handful of them on planet Earth. But he is one of them,” Damon said. “Awards — whatever, who gives a (expletive). I mean, except for this one. But … I hope this is his year. I don’t know if you’re supposed to say that out loud. But … when I did ‘The Departed,’ we said it out loud a lot about Marty (Scorsese) and it panned out.” Saturday’s loose and sometimes coarse ceremony saw Depp praising his wife, actress Amber Heard, “for putting up with me” and Bale getting in a dig at the 2,000-plus attendees, which included socialites who sometimes chatted away at dinner tables during acceptance speeches. “I’ve never been at a film festival that ignores the speakers so much as this film festival,” said Bale, on stage with his “The Big Short” co-stars Steve Carell, Jeremy Strong and Finn Wittrock. Cate Blanchett, being lauded for her performance in “Carol,” was more magnanimous. She thanked the festival, which runs through Jan. 11, “for reminding us — all of us honored tonight — that if we’re not nominated for any other award not to feel like losers. We had a moment of glory.” The festival announced its awards ahead of time, minimizing anxiety for actors and allowing plenty of time for informal reunions. Depp hugged his “Finding Neverland” co-star Kate Winslet on the red carpet before the show. Damon walked backstage in conversation with Blanchett. The two shared the screen in “The Talented Mr. Ripley” and “The Monuments Men.” “Room” star Brie Larson and “Trumbo” star Bryan Cranston had both screened their personal movies at the festival years earlier. Cranston wrote and directed a feature, “Last Chance,” that played Palm Springs in 1999. “I will forever be grateful to you for doing that for me. It launched a different phase of my career,” he told the crowd. DEAR ABBY: My husband ed to stop drinking. I’ve tried to went to Florida three months ago make my son listen to reason, to to care for an ailing former lover. no avail. My sister tells me if I don’t He told me she will be leaving him a sizable inheritance and he get Greg some help, I could be needs to protect her from “vul- charged with adult neglect. But tures.” I admit I am suspicious I don’t know how to fix this. The of his motives. I think there may outcome is increasingly bleak. be more going on than what he’s What can I do? — MOM WITH A PROBLEM telling me, but he has DEAR MOM: If the been painting a pretty inability to convince picture of how rosy our a substance-addicted future will be with her adult relative to get gift. help were against the He has now suggestlaw, there wouldn’t ed that we get a tempobe enough prisons to rary divorce so he can hold all the “offendmarry her in order to ers.” get her entire estate! He As much as you claims it will be nothlove your son, you ing more than a busiDear Abby can’t “fix” his alcohol ness arrangement. His suggestion left me flabbergasted. addiction. You should, however, Even though our marriage has find the nearest Al-Anon group been rocky at times, I have never and attend some meetings. And seen this side of him. I don’t while you are at it, bring your know whether to believe him and sister with you because she has be simply disappointed at his cal- a lot to learn. Chief among the lous behavior, or not believe him lessons is that someone else’s and conclude that he really wants drinking is not another pera divorce so he can marry her. son’s fault or responsibility to Any thoughts? — HEARTSICK IN control. I am sorry for your pain, because I’m sure it is conSOUTH CAROLINA DEAR HEARTSICK: Your siderable. DEAR ABBY: I’m an attorney. husband appears to still be carrying a torch for his old flame. Recently at a party, an acquainAre you sure she is really sick? tance was talking about some litIf it’s the truth, then the “vul- igation his company is involved ture” I see on the horizon may in. I commented briefly on something he said, and he respondbe him. I hope you appreciate how ed, “We take advice from attorextremely manipulative your neys we PAY,” and walked away. husband appears to be. Because Should I feel insulted, or should of it, and since he has spoken I have stayed out of the converthe “D” word, consult a lawyer sation to begin with? — HURT to ensure that your interests FEELINGS IN FLORIDA DEAR HURT: Some peowill be protected regardless of his motives. I’m saying that in ple think that anything that’s case the woman turns out to be offered for free is without value, and it appears the man you healthier than both of you. DEAR ABBY: How do you help encountered is one of them. someone who doesn’t want to Because this is his world view, be helped? My adult son, “Greg,” try not to take it personally. who lives with me, is slowly Your motives were generous. I drinking himself to death. He was see no reason to muzzle yourlaid off two years ago, and I know self in the future if you think he is depressed and has given up you have something helpful to say. on life. Dear Abby is written by AbiIt has reached the point where he is showing signs of cirrho- gail Van Buren, also known as sis, but he refuses to do anything Jeanne Phillips, and was founded about it. The last time he saw a by her mother, Pauline Phillips. doctor was three years ago. The Contact Dear Abby at www.Deardoctor said Greg’s liver functions Abby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los were not normal and he need- Angeles, CA 90069. Charleston a focus of 40th season of Spoleto Festival USA CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Historic Charleston is a large focus of next spring’s 40th edition of the Spoleto Festival USA, from glimpses of the city in the iconic opera “Porgy and Bess” to the tragedy of the Emanuel AME Church shootings. The lineup for the internationally known arts festival that runs from May 27 through June 12 was unveiled on Sunday. It features Spoleto’s first production of George Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess,” the famed opera about Charleston and its people based on the novel by Charleston native DuBose Heyward. The production is being designed by Jonathan Green, the local artist known worldwide for his colorful paintings of black residents of the sea islands on the Southeast coast. The opera will be Spoleto’s first production in the Gaillard Center, the city’s new $142 million performing arts center that opened last fall. The center is the single most expensive municipal project in the city’s almost 350 year history. The festival also features a multimedia project by art- ist Carrie Mae Weems entitled “Grace Notes: Reflections for Now.” The production incudes songs, texts, spoken words and video projections raising questions about the role of grace in a democracy. It was inspired in part by President Obama singing “Amazing Grace” during his eulogy for the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, one of nine people shot and killed at Emanuel AME Church last June. A white man has been charged with murder and other counts in the case. Jazz singer Rene Marie will also include a song, “Be the Change,” during her May 29 concert at the Gaillard Center. The song was commissioned by the festival and inspired by the community’s show of unity in the aftermath of the shootings. After the tragedy, thousands of people gathered on the sweeping Ravenel Bridge to remember the victims. Nigel Redden, the festival’s general director, said in a statement that Spoleto has long called Charleston home and “wanted to provide an outlet for these reactions to demonstrate how art can help people heal as well as provide an important voice in times when it can be difficult to find words.” The festival also is presenting “Afram or Swita the Beauty” by Charleston-born composer Edmund Thorton Jenkins 90 years after his death. It’s thought to be the first time it’s been performed and is being staged as a cabaret review with dance and songs. Among other shows on the Spoleto schedule are a production of Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Ernest” staged by Dublin’s Gate Theatre and the American premiere of “The Little Match Girl” by German composer Helmut Lachenmann. Jazz singer Cecile McLorin Salvant also performs and the finale on the banks of the Ashley River at Middleton Place features the soul band Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats. The Spoleto Festival USA was founded in Charleston in 1977 by Gian Carlo Menotti, modeled after and as a companion to his Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy. Tickets go on sale on Jan. 14. Online: Spoleto Festival USA at spoletousa.org Police vow to stop surfers who use violence to protect waves PALOS VERDES ESTATES, Calif. (AP) — So much for hanging loose. For decades, local surfers have been accused of using violence and intimidation to protect their Southern California surf spot from intrusion by outsiders. Now, a police chief is vowing to crack down on the so-called Bay Boys. Authorities have been accused of looking the other way as local surfers at Lunada Bay in tony Palos Verdes Estates threatened outsiders, tossed rocks at them and vandalized their cars. Surfer Sef Krell says that when he went to try the waves last year, men threw dirt clods at him and yelled at him to go home. When he persevered and got in the water, the gang hurled rocks at him and chucked his belongings into the waves. “I’m in the water alone and there are people yards away throwing dangerous missiles at me,” said Krell, an attorney from Encino who’s surfed all over the world. “I don’t have any way to protect myself because that culture is allowed to continue without the type of law enforcement that I would expect.” Jeff Kepley, the new police chief, hopes to make the first arrest of one of the assailants in years. He has added patrols along the coast and ordered overtime for officers in the city about 30 miles south of Los Angeles that’s known for its multimillion-dollar homes. “We will make an example out of anyone who behaves criminally down there,” Kepley said. Authorities have repeatedly pledged AP to rid their coast of bullying and other A surfer takes on a huge wave at Lunada Bay in Palos Verdes Estates, bad behavior, but critics say enforcement California. is weak. Kepley took over the police departI’m not saying we did — we are going to ment in Palos Verdes Estates about a year able for the past. But “if we did discount a claim — and make sure we do the right thing,” he said. ago and said he couldn’t be held account- www.newstribune.com D4 DIVERSIONS MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 2016 Monday Crossword Puzzle Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle GARFIELD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 1 Hockey disk 5 Blows, as one’s lines 10 Belmont Stakes, e.g. 14 Workplace protection org. 15 Parts in a play 16 British prep school 17 Arab League prince 18 Deed holder 19 Weaponry 20 Canadian flag symbol 22 “Farewell, mon ami!” 23 “Put a __ on it!” 24 Prevailing weather 26 After-dinner brandy 30 Every 24 hours 31 “Hold Me” Grammy winner K.T. 32 Rap sheet abbr. 33 Speech therapy subject 37 Actor Baldwin 38 Advertising handout 40 Wedding vows 41 Honky-__ 42 Rowboat need 43 High-80s grade 44 Like mountain roads 46 Mojave or Gobi 47 Two-deck rummy variety 50 Dylan or Dole 51 Hotelier Helmsley 52 Final details to take care of ... and, literally, what the last words of 20Across and 10and 29-Down can be 58 The Emerald Isle 59 Heavenly food 60 Injured, as a muscle 61 Wealthy, in Juárez 62 In the midst of 63 Unexpected problem 64 Sharp-edged 65 Shopping binge 66 Tranquil discipline PEANUTS BLONDIE BEETLE BAILEY SHOE MONDAY EVENING MEDIACOM DISH DTV HI and LOIS FUNKY WINKERBEAN WGN-A ION CW KMOS 54.25 3 KOMU 79.5 7 79.1 6 Me-TV 79.9 9 KMIZ 79.11 10 KQFX 79.15 11 KZOU 79.7 12 KRCG 79.17 13 LIFE 54.17 29 ESPN 55.3 30 ESPN2 55.5 31 FSMW 55.7 32 FNC MSNBC CNBC TRUTV 51.13 33 FX 52.1 37 TNT 53.9 38 WE 51.21 39 DISC 51.11 40 A&E 54.11 41 CNN HLN 53.1 42 53.21 34 52.17 35 53.23 36 53.3 43 TVLAND 53.13 44 SALLY FORTH MARMADUKE 79.3 2 25 86.7 4 FAMILY 51.5 45 55.13 46 TBS FAMILY CIRCUS 53.5 47 NICK 53.19 48 ANPL 52.19 49 TLC MTV VH1 CMT 51.19 50 SPIKE 53.11 60 241 241 AMC 54.23 61 131 254 USA DISNEY HALL OXY SYFY BRAVO HIST TRAVEL FOOD HGTV COMC E! BET JUCE CREATE INSP EWTN GET GRIT NBCSN 54.15 58 53.15 59 ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: xwordeditor@aol.com By Janice Luttrell ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC MOVIES 6:30 7 PM 7:30 SPORTS 8 PM 47 Supermarket staffer 48 Eagle’s nest 49 Straight up, cocktailwise 50 Good, in France 53 “Want the light __ off?” 54 Crafts website 55 Taboo 56 Really dull time 57 Arcade giant 59 Pas’ mates 01/04/16 KIDS 8:30 9 PM 1/3/16 01/04/16 9:30 JANUARY 4, 2016 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 - TOON 53.17 57 34 Sit at a four-way stop, say 35 Sweet’s opposite 36 Furtive “Hey!” 38 __ Knox 39 Psychedelic light source 43 Emmy winner Neuwirth 45 Land between Can. and Mex. 46 Prescription amount Ken. The Great Go Game Place for Gospel Manna The Real KNLJ The Great You and ` Copeland Awakening Miracles Truth Fest Life Specials Awakening Me 239 307 <+++ Red Dragon Sir Anthony Hopkins. <+++ Batman Jack Nicholson, Michael Keaton. Mother Mother 250 305 Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds 36 14 Fam.Guy Fam.Guy Whose Whose Penn&Teller News Sein. Cougar T Cougar T Raising Commu. 6 - PBS NewsHour Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Independent Lens Charlie Rose (N) Democracy Now! KOMU 8 Wheel of Supers- Teleno- The Biggest Loser "Money Hungry" (SP) KOMU 8 The Tonight Show Seth 8 8 vela News Fortune tore (N) News Meyers ` - - MASH MASH Griffith Griffith HappyD. Laverne Hogan Hogan Burnett Perry Mason Movie ABC 17 ABC 17 The Bachelor (SP) (N) Bachelor Live (N) ABC 17 Jimmy Kimmel Live Nightline 17 17 News News News 10 ` 22 22 BigBang BigBang Superhuman (N) ABC 17 News at 9 Mike&M. Mike&M. Girls Girls The Family Family TMZ Crime Watch Daily Law & Order: S.V.U. Law & Order: S.V.U. 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