Former Savonburg resident Delbert Manson, 72, of Pittsburg died Thursday, June 17, 2010, at St. John’s Regional Medical Center in Joplin, Mo.
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service Chapel in Moran. Interment will follow in Savonburg Swedish Cemetery.
He will lie in state at the funeral home from 1 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
Memorials to help defray funeral expenses may be left at the funeral home. Condolences to the family may be left online at feuerbornfuneral.com.
Clyde Noyce
Visitation for the Rev. Clyde Noyce, whose obituary was published in the June 7 Iola Register, will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at Wesley United Methodist Church.
Memorials services will be at 2 o’clock at Wesley United Methodist Church.
[Readers’ forum] Hospital’s future endangered
In the past several months, there have been ongoing discussions and debates regarding the future of Allen County Hospital. Although it has been stated before, the medical staff would like to clearly restate its position concerning the hospital.
As it now stands, Allen County Hospital capably serves the county’s population. It houses the necessary equipment to appropriately diagnose and treat the people of Allen County, and is fortunate to have outstanding personnel who provide excellent nursing care, therapy, meals, and building maintenance. What the hospital does, it does well. We believe it is vital that it do more.
In communities all around us, hospitals are expanding. Whether it is through significant remodeling or new construction, they have committed to growth in physical structure, improvement in pa-tient accommodations, and updates in technology. Such expansion affords these other hospitals an enhanced ability to attract young physicians and diverse specialists. With a new generation of doctors practicing in their hospitals, these communities will not have to worry about the coming shortage of physicians. Having a broader range of specialists reduces the number of patients who must be transfered to distant tertiary facilities. That means better continuity of care, less stress for patients and greater convenience of patient families. We want all of these things for the Allen County patient population, as well.
The intent here is correct any misconception that the medical staff of ACH has been denigrating our hospital.
That is far from the truth. Please be assured that we feel Allen County Hospital is neither dysfunctional nor obsolete. It is, however, endangered.
Respectfully,
the medical staff,
Allen County Hospital:
Becky Lohman, M.D.
Frank Porter, D.O.
Glen Singer, M.D.
Tim Spears, D.O.
Wes Stone, D.O.
Earl Walter, D.O.
Brian Wolfe, M.D.
K-State prof will weigh in on climate change
Chuck Rice, a professor of agronomy at Kansas State University, will be one of two scientists who write a chapter on agriculture in a report by the United Nations Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change.
Prof. Rice was flattered. The appointment is “a tremendous honor and responsibility,” he said. And added that policymakers worldwide must be equipped with the best and latest scientific information as they respond to climate issues.
The UN report won’t be completed and released to the public until 2014.
Staggering news? Hardly. Heck, why spend four years of study to prepare a report on how climate change will affect world agriculture when a guy can learn all he needs to know on the subject by listening to Fox News for five minutes?
The fact that men like Prof. Rice, whose scholarship and research have won him a worldwide reputation as an expert on world agriculture, consider it an honor and a privilege to work on an international climate change panel should remind thinking people that climate change can only be studied profitably by meteorologists, climatologists and other qualified scientists.
Snap judgments on scientific matters based on gut reactions, political implications and/or potential economic consequences are worse than useless: they can prevent government action or skew the way government acts and worsen the problem they pretend to address.
The same people who wouldn’t dream of telling a brain surgeon how to remove a tumor, totally disregard the studies made and conclusions reached on the effects of releasing carbon dioxide and other so-called greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. They recognize the surgeon’s expertise and know they cannot possibly do what he does. They refuse to recognize the fact-based science practiced by the meteorologists, physicists, geologists and agronomists who, together, have reached conclusions about the effect man-caused activities — such as burning fossil fuels — is having on the weather.
Is every scientist always right? Of course not. But when a large majority of the pertinent scientific community accepts a theory that explains an ongoing set of events, that theory is most probably valid and in any event deserves respect and careful consideration.
TODAY, HOWEVER, as scientists coalesce around the climate change theory and the effects those changes will have on human civilization if not mitigated by lessening emissions, popular opinion is moving in the opposite direction. Most polls today show that the percentage of the public that accepts the science and agrees that emissions should be reduced is growing smaller rather than increasing.
Why? Possibly because what that segment of the public has come to believe is that reducing emissions of carbon dioxide — the primary greenhouse gas — will cost too much and that the benefits of emission reduction are too uncertain and too far in the future to justify paying the price — any price — today.
To compound the problem, what should be a scientific issue has been politicized. Because President Obama agrees with the science, Republican leaders oppose it. Not, of course, because the science is faulty, but because it would cost too much to put a brake on carbon dioxide emission. Which is another way of kicking the can down the road to the next set of decision-makers.
And because it is now politically correct for right-wingers to oppose the energy bill the House has already passed, their less responsible spokesmen fill the airwaves with utter nonsense about es-tablished meteorological science.
It is not a good year to be rational.
— Emerson Lynn, jr.
Yates High ball players earn honors
TOPEKA — Two Yates Center High softball players received state honors when the Kansas Softball Coaches Association released its 2010 all-state teams Thursday.
Jessica Hartwig, junior, was named to the 2010 Kansas Class 2-1A first team as an outfielder.
Senior Kassy Reynolds earned Class 2-1A second team honors as catcher.
Hartwig and Reynolds helped lead the YCHS Wildcats to a Class 2-1A regional tournament championship. The Wildcats earned their first Class 2-1A state tournament trip, losing in the first round.
Pittsburg St. Mary’s-Colgan and Udall dominated the Class 2-1A selection. Both schools had five players on the first team. Colgan placed three on the second team and Udall had two players on it.
Rain doesn’t dampen horseshoe tourney
The Clyde Gerdsen Memorial Horseshoe Pitching tournament had to endure a rain delay in the afternoon session. But the pitchers waited it out and finished up last Saturday.
The annual sanctioned tournament sponsored by Sonic Drive-In of Iola drew 24 contestants. It is hosted by the Iola Riverside Horseshoe Club at Riverside Park.
Randy Springer, Gas, won the Class D title going 4-2 in matches. Earl Riebel of LaHarpe was second at 3-3 and Jerry Dugan, Pittsburg, was third.
Bob Renfro and Bob Outt, both of Stockton, Mo., battled it out for the top spot in Class A. Renfro won, going 5-1, with Outt second at 4-2.
Letha Harris of Stockton, Mo., and Neil Hartwig, Humboldt both were 3-2. Harris was third with a 53.81 percent on ringers thrown while Hartwig was 45.86 percent.
Dave Mathewson, Gas, was fifth. Ken Perry, Topeka, took sixth.
Gregg Turner, Wichita, went undefeated in six matches to win Class B. Marion Harris and Alfred Mundy, both of Stockton, Mo., were second and third.
Ken Martin of Lawrence finished fourth.
All with 1-5 records, Tony Fowler, Independence, Oren Harris, Stockton, Mo., and Gordon Davey, Emporia, ended up 5-6-7.
The Class C title went to Frank Smith, Topeka, at 5-1. Jeff Lowery of Stockton, Mo., was second at 4-2. John Trollope, Wichita, placed third and Kenny Riebel of LaHarpe was fourth.
Susan Hainline, Topeka, won Class E, winning five matches and losing one. Casey Riebel, LaHarpe was second, and Greg Cowan, Garnett, was third.
Youth tennis camp offered in Iola
A tennis camp for girls and boys of all ages will be June 28-July 2 at Iola High School’s tennis courts on East Monroe Street.
The camp runs 8-10 a.m. each day. Fee is $20 per participant and pre-registration is required by the first day of camp. Former Iola High standout Eric Sparks and current state medalist Kent Toland will conduct the camp.
Sparks played for IHS and placed at the state tennis tournament, plus played one year of tennis at Emporia State University. Toland is the current Kansas Class 4A state runner-up. He took second in the state tournament in May.
For information and registration contact Sparks at 365-3944 or 228-8130 or Toland at 365-2595.
The camp will feature tennis drills, games, lessons on fundamentals and rules. No prior tennis experience is required.
Participants must bring a tennis racquet and water bottle. Wear appropriate exercise clothes, tennis shoes and sunscreen.
There are no bathroom facilities at the tennis courts.
Neama Douglas
Neama Marie (Ball) Douglas, 93, died Tuesday, June 15, 2010.
She was born June 2, 1917, in Neodesha, to George and Nellie (Johnson) Ball.
She began piano lessons at age eight and was cooking, cleaning, sewing and gardening by age 10. She was saved at age 11 and spent her life focused on serving God.
In 1934 she graduated from Neodesha High School and on Sept. 2, 1934, she married Charles Douglas. Their life together was spent starting new churches and pastoring in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Louisiana. She played the piano and organ, sang with her husband, taught Sunday school classes, visited in homes and entertained in their home. He retired in 1994 due to poor health. He died in 1996.
She was an avid reader and liked to quilt.
In 1999 she moved into a garage apartment where she lived until February 2008 when she became a resident of Windsor Place.
She is survived by two sons, Stephen and his wife, Cecelia, and Stanley, Iola; four granddaughters, Rachelle and her husband, Randy, Dawsonville, Ga., Janelle and her husband, Lewis Goins, Oswego, and Jenna White and Emma Douglas, Iola; a grandson, Paul Douglas, Iola; and four great-grandsons and two great-granddaughters.
Four brothers, Earl, Ernest, Jack and Frank, and a great-grandson died earlier.
Visitation will be from 9 to 10 a.m. Saturday at Parkview Holiness Church. Funeral service will be at 10 o’clock at the church.
Graveside services will be at 12:30 p.m. at Mount Hope Cemetery in Independence.
Memorials to Independence Bible School may be left at Penwell-Gabel Gibson Chapel in Chanute. To leave a message for the family online visit PenwellGabelChanute.com.
Jeanetta Womack
Jeanetta Marie Womack, 82, of Bowling Green, Ky., died at Tuesday, June 15, 2010, at her home.
She was born May 19, 1928, in Riley, to Alfred and Evelyn Beck. She was a homemaker and member of Holy Spirit Catholic Church.
Survivors include four sons, Richard and his wife, Carol, Lutz, Fla., Steve, Richmond, Ky., Jim and his wife, Sherry, Bowling Green, and Daniel and his girlfriend, Becky Phillips, Mesa, Ariz.; a daughter, Kathleen Womack and her partner, Catherine Cornelius, Atlanta, Ga.; two sisters, Mary Jane Yonning and her husband, Dee, Wamego, and Nadine Thowe and her husband, Bob, Topeka; seven grandchildren, Edward Womack, Orlando, Fla., Emily Goleck and Elizabeth Womack, Lutz, Robin Dickerson, Athens, Ga., Amanda Marlin and her husband, Josh, Henderson, Ky., and Jamie Womack and Lori Watt and her husband, Dewayne, Bowling Green; five great-grandchildren; and longtime care giver, Kathy Cherry.
Her husband, Richard Rex Womack, and a brother, Alfred Beck Jr., died earlier.
Funeral Mass was at 4 p.m. today at Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Bowling Green. Burial in the Highland Cemetery in Iola at a later date.
Memorials may be sent to the Alzheimer’s Association, Greater Kentucky and Southern Indiana Chapter, Kaden Tower, 6100 Dutchmans Ln., Ste 401, Louisville, KY 40205-3284.
Johnson-Vaughn-Phelps Funeral Home of Bowling Green is in charge of arrangements.
Shirley McGrew
Shirley P. McGrew, 81, of Iola died Tuesday, June 15, 2010, at Windsor Place Nursing Center in Iola.
She was born Sept. 21, 1928, in Iola, to Paul and Imo (Burger) Wright. She grew up in Iola and graduated from Iola High School in 1946.
On Feb. 10, 1951, she married Jack L. McGrew in Iola where they made their home. She worked as a secretary for Eastern Kansas Gas for eight years and as a guidance secretary at Iola High School for 26 years. He died Feb. 26, 2010.
She was a member of the Calvary United Methodist Church in Iola where she was a member of the Home Builders class. She was also a Lioness with the Iola Lions Club.
She enjoyed flowers, NASCAR racing and all kinds of sports.
She is survived by two children, Bob and his wife, Nancy, Newport Beach, Calif., and Ruth Vincent and her husband, Jack, Iola; three granddaughters, Kristi Bettega and her husband, Chris, Pittsburg, Jana Garver and her fiance, Paul Eyler, Iola, and Dr. Megan McGrew, Chicago, Ill.; and a great-grandson.
A brother, Martin “Marty” Wright, died earlier.
Cremation has taken place.
Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Calvary United Methodist Church in Iola. The Rev. Gene McIntosh will officiate. The family will receive friends in fellowship hall at the church an hour prior to services.
Inurnment will be in Highland Cemetery in Iola following the service.
Memorials to Calvary United Methodist Church, Windsor Place or Allen County Hospice may be left at Waugh-Yokum & Friskel Memorial Chapel of Iola, which is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences for the family may be left at iolafuneral.com.