Lawrence Journal-World 12-27-2016

Page 1

HOW NUMBERS 1—54 RELATE TO COACH SELF ON HIS BIRTHDAY. 1D BRITS BITTER OVER RISING BEER TAX; PUBS STRUGGLE TO STAY AFLOAT. PAGE 1B

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World

®

$1.00 / LJWorld.com

Tuesday • December 27 • 2016

City defines affordable housing in new policy

Retiring KU professor invented drugs for HIV, other conditions

By Rochelle Valverde

BY SARA SHEPHERD

rvalverde@ljworld.com

When residential developers seeking incentives from the city propose affordable housing units for their project, they will now have an exact target to meet. The city has decided on a model that specifically calculates fair values for Lawrence rentals, and will define what is affordable for each size of unit. “I think it gives us a quantifying measure, where we can actually look at something, and instead of just subjectively saying, ‘Oh, I think that is or isn’t affordable,’ we can actually tie it to a fixed market rate we have established,” said City Commissioner Matthew Herbert. The city’s Affordable Housing Advisory Herbert Board recommended using the Fair Market Rent model, and commissioners agreed at their most recent meeting to incorporate the recommendation into the city’s new economic development incentives policy. For example, the fair value rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Lawrence for 2016 is $639 per month, including the cost of required utilities — namely water, electricity and gas, if applicable. For a two-bedroom unit, it’s $835 per month.

A better system The advisory board was established

> HOUSING, 3A l Inside: Fair Market Rent values;

full list of city’s affordable housing provisions in new incentives policy

PUBLISHED SINCE 1891

l l l

sshepherd@ljworld.com

T

Nick Krug/Journal-World Photo

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR OF PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTRY Valentino Stella is retiring at the end of this semester. Stella has invented or co-invented several widelyused drugs during his years at KU. He is pictured at Simons Laboratories on West Campus on Wednesday, Dec. 14.

It’s not the papers, it’s not the grants, it’s not the accolades. It’s the impact you have on people’s lives.”

here’s a high chance you know someone whose life has been saved, extended or improved by a drug invented by University of Kansas professor Valentino “Val” Stella. Stella himself does: A KU colleague and the father of another both used the drug Velcade to treat blood cancer, to name just two. “About two-thirds through my career, all of a sudden I realized this is not about publishing another paper,” said Stella, an internationally lauded distinguished professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at KU. “It’s not the papers, it’s not the grants, it’s not the accolades. It’s the impact you have on people’s lives.” Stella’s 43-year career as a professor at KU came to a close with his retirement this semester. Velcade is one of several drugs he invented or coinvented that made it to market as a commercial product. Including those, he said he holds 45 U.S. patents.

— Valentino “Val” Stella, University of Kansas distinguished professor of pharmaceutical chemistry

> PROFESSOR, 2A

Judge dismisses case from KU student seeking $100K after expulsion Case highlights uncertainty about students’ free-speech rights on social media

By Sara Shepherd sshepherd@ljworld.com

A federal judge has thrown out a lawsuit seeking monetary damages from a University of Kansas administrator, brought by a KU student who at one point was expelled over social media posts.

Experts say the ruling doesn’t answer the larger, muddier question of how far universities can go in disciplining students for things they post on social media. But it does send a message that individual

Mostly sunny

L A W R E NC E

Journal-World

®

LJWorld.com | KUSports.com

VOL. 158 / NO. 362 / 20 PAGES

university administrators can’t be forced to pay financial damages in such cases — partly because the online speech question is so unclear. Navid Yeasin sued KU vice provost for student

CLASSIFIED..............2C-4C COMICS...........................4A

|

affairs Tammara Durham in November 2015 in Douglas County District Court, and the case moved to U.S. District Court in January. This month, federal Judge Julie Robinson dismissed it.

High: 50

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

|

Low: 28

+ FREE ALIGNMENT CHECK

> DISMISSED, 2A

Forecast, 6A

OPINION..........................5A HOROSCOPES, PUZZLES.......5B

BUY 3 TIRES GET 1 FREE ON A SET OF 4 SELECT IN-STOCK TIRES WITH INSTALLATION PURCHASE

|

After spending more than two years expelled while battling his case in county and state courts, Yeasin is now re-enrolled at KU, according to the university’s directory. Yeasin had argued that

by expelling him, KU violated his First Amendment rights because his Twitter posts referencing an ex-girlfriend were protected speech, according to the federal suit. He also argued KU violated his right to due process.

SPORTS....................1D-4D WELLCOMMONS.........1C, 3C

www.bigotires.com SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE^ ^See store for details Valid at participating locations on in-stock sets of four Aspen Touring A/S, Mesa A/P2, Sumitomo Tour Plus LS & LX brand tires. Installation charges extra; required on all four tires. Up to 10% shop fee based on nondiscounted retail price, not to exceed $35. Disposal fees extra, where permitted. Not valid with other offers. See store for pricing. Expires 1/15/17. No cash value.

4661 W. 6TH LAWRENCE, KS 785.830.9090 2735 SW WANAMAKER TOPEKA, KS 785.271.0194

Mon- Fri 7am-6pm Sat 7am-5pm Sun 9am-4pm ( in Lawrence) Closed on 1/1/17 for the Holiday


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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