Lawrence R. (Larry) Bigelow

Lawrence R. (Larry) Bigelow, 79, passed away peacefully on Monday, Sept. 23, 2019, of cancer in the home of his sister, Karen Fritchey, in Joplin, Mo. Three of his sisters and a niece were by his side.

He was born Sept. 8, 1940, at home on a farm near Moran, where he grew up with his six siblings. He began his education in a one-room school (Milwood), later going to Moran where he graduated with the Class of 1958. He was a good student and athlete, lettering in track, football and basketball.

Lawrence proudly served his country in the U.S. Army and received an honorable discharge.

He loved hunting  quail and pheasant, especially with his brothers-in-law. He also liked to fish and would gladly share his hunting and fishing experiences with just about anyone.

Prior to his last month in Joplin, Lawrence had lived in Oklahoma City the past 50 years where he worked in securities and investments. He retired in September 2015.

His family and friends enjoyed his quick wit and dry sense of humor and sometimes his embellishments.

Lawrence is survived by a daughter, Janice (Scott) Craig; two grandchildren, Amanda and Austin Craig, Broomfield, Colo.; five sisters, Melva Lincicome, El Dorado; Wanda Sell, Frontenac; June (Elton) Green, Cedar Falls, Iowa; Karen Fritchey and Bonnie Weast, both of Joplin, Mo.; along with numerous nieces, nephews, extended family and friends.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Olive and Jess Bigelow; a brother, Deen; and special friend, Kay Johnson.

Lawrence donated his body to medical science. A memorial service with military honors will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 12, at the Senior Center in El Dorado. Memorial contributions, per Lawrence’s request, may be made to America Legion Post 13, P.O. Box 2883, Joplin, Mo., 64803.

Europe praises Ukrainian deal, others call it betrayal

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia and European powers, anxious to end a protracted military conflict in eastern Ukraine, on Wednesday welcomed the new accord between Ukraine and Russia-backed separatists but many in Ukraine dismissed it as a capitulation to Russia.

In the deal signed Tuesday with the separatists, Ukraine, Russia and European mediators pledged to hold a local election in Ukraine’s rebel-held east, where a grinding five-year conflict between the separatists and Ukrainian troops has killed more than 13,000 people.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy hailed the deal as a major step toward resolving the conflict, and the election pledge was seen as the final hurdle before a much-anticipated summit between Zelenskiy, Russian President Vladimir Putin and the leaders of France and Germany, who have helped mediate the peace talks. Russia had previously refused to sit down with Zelenskiy before he agreed on the plan for the local election in war-torn eastern Ukraine.

But other Ukrainian politicians raised alarms about it, saying it opens the door to cementing Russia’s presence in the region.

“This is capitulation to Russia,” former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, now a lawmaker, told reporters in parliament on Wednesday.

Poroshenko said the deal is “playing into Russia’s hands” because Ukraine committed to holding the local election but did not receive any guarantees that it would regain control over of all of its border with Russia.

Lawmaker Andriy Parubiy, former parliament speaker, said he would push for hearings into the peace deal, accusing Zelenskiy’s new administration of sidelining society from the decision-making in such a crucial development for the nation.

Zelenskiy’s party holds a majority in parliament after resoundingly defeating Poroshenko and Parubiy’s allies in an early election this summer.

A few hundred people, mostly nationalists, protested the deal outside the presidential administration in Kyiv on Tuesday night and on the Maidan square that has symbolized protests against Russian influence. A dozen rallied outside parliament on Wednesday and another Maidan protest was planned.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Wednesday welcomed the Ukraine peace deal as a “positive step” to implementing the 2015 peace deal and said the date for the summit of the four leaders is to be announced soon.

While Russia once bankrolled the separatists, sending troops and equipment across the border to the separatists, the Kremlin has tried to play down its involvement in eastern Ukraine in recent years, pulling back its troops and mostly relying on proxy forces. Anxious to get Europe to lift at least some of the sanctions over its involvement in Ukraine, Putin agreed on a major prisoner exchange with Ukraine last month.

The United States and the European Union slapped Russia with a flurry of sanctions over its annexation of Crimea in 2014 and its support for the separatists in eastern Ukraine, which has hurt substantial bilateral trade between Russia and Europe.

Businesses in the EU — in France and Germany in particular — have been pushing for the EU to ease the sanctions but European political leaders have insisted this can only be done if there is progress on the peace settlement for eastern Ukraine.

French President Emmanuel Macron met with Putin and Zelenskiy separately this summer, encouraging them to relaunch the peace talks. While praising Zelenskiy for reaching out to residents in the rebel-held territories, Macron supported the decision to give back Russia its voting rights at the Council of Europe and signaled that he would support Russia returning to the Group of Seven, the world’s biggest economies, if there is progress in the Ukraine peace settlement.

In Berlin, a spokeswoman for Chancellor Angela Merkel praised Tuesday’s accord as “an important step” toward a peace settlement in eastern Ukraine.

“We welcome in particular the commitment of Ukrainian President Zelenskiy, who took constructive steps forward in the interest of a peaceful solution in Donbass,” Ulrike Demmer told reporters.

Russia, Ukraine and the separatists agreed on a cease-fire in 2015 and even signed a peace deal for a political transition in the east. The peace settlement, however, never took off because the separatists refused to let Ukrainian troops regain control of the border with Russia and allow Ukrainian parties to run in the local election.

Zelenskiy insisted Tuesday that the local election in the east would be held only under Ukrainian law and after Ukraine regains control of the border.

Darka Olifer, a spokeswoman for the Ukrainian envoy to the talks Leonid Kuchma, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that all parties have committed to consider the vote valid only if monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe rule that the election was free and fair.

Tatyana Stanovaya, a scholar at the Moscow Carnegie Center and head of the R.Politik political analysis firm, described Tuesday’s agreement as a vague document that does not commit Ukraine or Russia to anything.

“Ukraine has agreed to a formula that is very vague and has no details. The question is what happens next,” she said.

Russia and Ukraine are likely to face the same stumbling blocks as four years ago unless one side is willing to offer a radical compromise.

Views in the Kremlin on the Ukrainian conflict vary between those unwilling to offer any concessions to Kyiv and those who see more benefits in offering compromises such as allowing peacekeepers in the east, because persisting in the confrontation is weighing heavily on Russia’s economy, said Stanovaya.

Zelenskiy, for his part, faces pressure both from Europe, which is anxious to see progress in peace settlement and from Ukrainians, who want peace in the east but are wary of reintegrating separatist rebels into the country’s political system.

 

Ex-officer guilty in neighbor’s killing

DALLAS (AP) — A white former Dallas police officer who shot her black unarmed neighbor to death after, she said, mistaking his apartment for her own was convicted of murder Tuesday in a verdict that prompted tears of relief from his family and chants of “black lives matter” from a crowd outside the courtroom.

The same jury that found Amber Guyger guilty in the September 2018 death of her upstairs neighbor, Botham Jean, will consider her fate after hearing additional testimony that started Tuesday afternoon. Her sentence could range from five years to life in prison under Texas law.

The jury took a matter of hours to convict Guyger, 31, after six days of testimony.

Cheers erupted in the courthouse as the verdict was announced, and someone yelled “Thank you, Jesus!” 

In the hallway outside the courtroom, a crowd celebrated and chanted “black lives matter.” When the prosecutors walked into the hall, they broke into cheers.

After the verdict was read, Guyger sat alone, weeping, at the defense table.

Jean’s friends and family later testified to explain how his death has affected them. First on the stand was Allison Jean, who said her son was killed just before he was due to turn 27.

“My life has not been the same. It’s just been like a roller coaster. I can’t sleep, I cannot eat. It’s just been the most terrible time for me,” she said.

Botham Jean’s sister, Allisa Findley, told the jury that she and her mother cry a lot, her formerly “bubbly” younger brother has retreated as if into a shell, and that her father is “not the same.”

“It’s like the light behind his eyes is off,” Findley said.

She said her children are now afraid of police.

Prosecutors also submitted text messages — accepted as evidence over defense objections — that indicated Guyger lacks sensitivity toward black people. In one, she suggests participants at a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade in Dallas could be persuaded to go home with the use of physical violence and pepper spray. In a message sent to Guyger’s phone, the messenger suggests she would like a German shepherd because the dog is racist. Guyger declares that she hates “everything and everyone but y’all.”

Guyger’s defense attorneys can argue that she deserves a light sentence because she acted out of sudden fear and confusion. The judge is expected to provide guidance on sentencing law.

Guyger was jailed Tuesday afternoon pending sentencing. It is unclear how long the punishment phase of the trial will last. Testimony will resume today.

The basic facts of the unusual shooting were not in dispute throughout the trial. Guyger said that after a long shift at work and still in uniform, she walked up to Jean’s apartment — which was on the fourth floor, directly above hers on the third — and found the door unlocked. She said she thought the apartment was her own when she drew her service weapon and entered.

Jean, an accountant from the Caribbean island nation of St. Lucia, had been eating a bowl of ice cream when Guyger entered his home and shot him.

The shooting drew widespread attention because of the strange circumstances and because it was one in a string of shootings of unarmed black men by white police officers.

“This is a huge victory, not only for the family of Botham Jean, but this is a victory for black people in America,” said Lee Merritt, one of the lawyers for Jean’s family. “It’s a signal that the tide is going to change here. Police officers are going to be held accountable for their actions, and we believe that will begin to change policing culture around the world.”

The jury that convicted Guyger was largely made up of women and people of color.

Attorney Ben Crump, also representing the family, credited the makeup of the jury for Tuesday’s conviction, and said he expects them to deliver a weighty sentence.

“I look at this jury. And I look at the diversity of this jury,” he said. “They will see past all the technical, intellectual justifications for an unjustifiable killing. And I believe they will do the right thing.”

Dallas Police Association President Mike Mata declined to comment Tuesday afternoon, saying Guyger’s lawyers asked him to wait until after sentencing. The group, which represents city police officers, has paid for Guyger’s legal defense and security.

The verdict may have defused tensions that began simmering Monday when jurors were told they could consider whether Guyger had a right to use deadly force under a Texas law known as the castle doctrine — even though she wasn’t in her own home.

The law is similar to “stand your ground” measures across the U.S. that state a person has no duty to retreat from an intruder. Prosecutor Jason Fine told jurors that while the law would have empowered Jean to shoot someone barging into his apartment, it doesn’t apply “the other way around.”

In a frantic 911 call played repeatedly during the trial, Guyger said “I thought it was my apartment” nearly 20 times. Her lawyers argued that the identical physical appearance of the apartment complex from floor to floor frequently led to tenants going to the wrong apartments.

But prosecutors questioned how Guyger could have missed numerous signs that she was in the wrong place, asked why she didn’t call for backup and suggested she was distracted by sexually explicit phone messages with her police partner.

Guyger was arrested three days after the killing. She was later fired and charged with murder . Tension has been high during the trial in Dallas, where five police officers were killed in an attack three years ago.

A look back in time

70 Years Ago

October 1949

Within the next few weeks the old “Richards house” to which Iolans pointed with pride in 1900, will be torn down to make room for a new Allen County Hospital on First Street at the head of Madison Avenue. The three-story frame building was built in the late 1890s by William H. Richards, an Iola pioneer who first came here in 1865. Richards was engaged in several business ventures, including the wholesale grocery firm known as Richards, Lakin and Ireland. At one time he owned four buildings on the square. No member of the family has lived in Iola in many years. The house has had several owners. For several years it was used as a funeral home by J.E. Releford. It was purchased some time ago by Thomas H. Bowlus, president of Allen County State Bank, who gave it to the county for a hospital site.

Referees to crack down on traveling

NEW YORK (AP) — James Harden slides sideways or steps backward, and the screaming starts.

Whether seated on the opposing bench or on a stool in a sports bar, somebody is insisting that Harden must have traveled between the time he finished dribbling and launched his shot from a different spot. Traveling will be an emphasis this season for officials, who are determined not to allow offensive players to gain an extra edge by taking an extra step.

Scoring stars like Harden already got an advantage once hand-checking on the perimeter was no longer legal, so they can’t be given another one.

“If we can’t allow people to hand check, we can’t allow them to travel because then they’re almost unguardable,” vice president of referee operations Mark Wunderlich said.

That said, most times when Harden does his signature step-back, he doesn’t travel.

“It is legal, except for the fact that he gets a third step in every now and then when his rhythm is just off, which shows you the highlight of how difficult it is,” said Monty McCutchen, the NBA’s head of referee development and training.

That’s why referees are working harder to get it right.

Critics of the NBA — and even some fans — have long sneered that the league doesn’t call traveling. McCutchen said data showed officials were missing about two per game, but the way the game is played today can make those misses more penal for the defense.

Players are bigger, faster and more skilled, and even big men who would have been centers in a previous generation are now do-everything forwards like 6-foot-11 MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo. He already gets far enough with the two steps that are legal, forget when allowed a third.

McCutchen compared the difference with Tiny Archibald, a 6-1 guard who played in the 1970s and ‘80s.

“He covered 10 feet with his two steps,” McCutchen said. “How far is Giannis covering? The game has changed.”

So officials have begun to change with it, altering the way they were taught to officiate when McCutchen and Wunderlich were on the floor. Before, referees were trained to look first at the defensive player. Now they have reversed their sequencing, looking first at the offensive player’s feet to make certain a legal pivot foot has been established and not changed.

And the league added new language in the rule book to define the “gather,” to clarify how many steps a player can take after receiving the ball or completing his dribble.

At the referees’ preseason meetings and training camp last week, McCutchen said officials studied replays of three travels each time they returned from a break, and had a dedicated 45-minute session on traveling.

An educational video was sent to teams , and the referees visited the coaches’ preseason meetings, where they had a traveling station with two players on the floor so they could do demonstrations for the coaches.

And Houston coach Mike D’Antoni said the league stressed that Harden’s step-back jumper is legal.

“They made a point, which is great, to tell every head coach that is not traveling. It’s not traveling,” D’Antoni said. “So hopefully coaches will quit complaining and hopefully you guys in the news will understand that that’s not traveling. There’s other points that we have to clean up that are traveling and the NBA is going to try to do a better job of that.”

San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich quipped last year that the step-back 3 came when players “jump backwards and travel and shoot a 3.” But the leaders of the referee team praised Harden for his cleverness and creativity.

“On the dribble, we always talk about dribbling you can take two legal steps to the basket, right? No one ever thought about on the gather after you dribble you can take two legal steps backwards,” Wunderlich said.

Added Jason Phillips, who will oversee the Replay Center: “The rulebook doesn’t state that the two steps have to be in any direction.”

Harden said it never should have been a debate, because if he was traveling then referees would have been whistling him for it.

“I’m tired of hearing that’s a travel, from coaches, from other players, from haters, fans, whatever you want to call it,” Harden said.

But he acknowledges it looks awkward, so the referees know they have to educate teams and fans just as much as themselves. There is no new rule or even a new interpretation of traveling, just a desire to correctly call the travels that are in the books.

That’s why it’s the biggest emphasis on the preseason list of points of education.

“The first one is traveling and the second one is traveling and the third, fourth and fifth one are traveling,” McCutchen said. “I’m only joking to show that there are POEs and then there are POEs. We really want to get better at our fundamentals of the game and traveling is a big part of that.”

Catherine Robson

Catherine Sue “Cathy” Robson, age 60, of Yates Center, died Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019 at her home. 

She was born May 18, 1959, to Dwight and Mildred (Kuhn) Burk at LaCrosse. 

She married Keith Robson on Aug. 18, 1980, in Yates Center.

She was preceded in death by her parents; and her husband, Keith. 

Survivors include children, Megan Sterling of Lenexa, Ben Robson and Savannah Robson of Yates Center; and other relatives. 

A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Yates Center Cemetery. 

NASCAR: Crazy weekend brings breath of fresh air for playoffs

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Chase Elliott crashed head-on into a wall and still recovered to win a pivotal race. That wasn’t even the most exciting thing to happen in NASCAR last week.

The series so short on superstars and spicy story lines had a frenetic week surrounding the first elimination race of the playoffs at the quirky Roval hybrid road course-oval at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was shockingly fired in the middle of the week to open a flurry of snarky remarks, hurt feelings and the dramatic exposure of the fragility of driver contracts.

Alex Bowman then became the story of Sunday’s race as he desperately tried to avoid elimination from the playoffs. He wrecked his fast car in the closing minute of the final practice session, spun on the opening lap, deliberately spun Bubba Wallace because he didn’t like Wallace flipping him the bird and somehow still finished second.

Bowman miraculously advanced to the next round of the playoffs — in large part because of a rare batch of errors by challenger Ryan Newman — and promptly slumped to the ground battling dehydration.

Wallace found him sitting next to his car, surrounded by NASCAR’s medical director and Jeff Gordon, and tossed the contents of his beverage in Bowman’s face after a brief verbal exchange. Gordon and the medical director were splashed, and fans are calling for Wallace to be suspended.

NASCAR head of competition Steve O’Donnell told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Monday that series leadership will have a conversation with Wallace. Who knows if NASCAR will talk with Bowman about spinning a guy who flips the bird.

Elliott, NASCAR’s new most popular driver, somehow came back to win after his very embarrassing gaffe with 45 laps remaining. He was the leader on a restart headed into the first turn when he locked his brakes and drove directly into a tire barrier as the rest of the field turned.

It should have ended his shot to win — and he’d already locked himself into the round of 12 of the playoffs, so pushing the limit wasn’t necessary — but somehow Elliott chased down Kevin Harvick in the closing laps to complete a comeback.

The entire weekend — played out in sweltering, record-high temperatures at the de facto home track of NASCAR — is what the series was like just 10 years ago. Every action on or off the track was buzzworthy, the top drivers were household names and people passionately cared about every twist and turn during the 11-month season.

Then the stars all retired, the driver market is getting a dramatic reset and fans haven’t embraced a young Bowman or William Byron or Ryan Blaney the way they did Gordon, Tony Stewart and Dale Earnhardt Jr.

The creation of the playoffs gradually diluted the importance of many of the 26 regular-season races, and fans stopped watching in droves as they tired of gimmicks, boring racing and unrelatable or unknown drivers.

Charlotte was at least one of the most interesting weekends in years, with genuine emotion and energy surrounding the sport. The playoff tension was palpable with only three drivers locked into the second round prior to Sunday. Before teams even got to the track, though, Stenhouse was dumped by Roush Fenway Racing even though he believed he was secure through 2021.

Team owner Jack Roush publicly intimated Stenhouse wrecked too much, and Stenhouse choked back tears later that day in discussing his emotional dismissal. Kevin Harvick, whose management group has taken over representation of Stenhouse, ripped the Roush organization for blindsiding his client with eight races remaining and very few seats — good ones, at least — available for 2020.

Drivers are working harder than ever to find rides, and the lucrative paydays have been slashed across the field. The big names still command top dollar, but Rick Hendrick proved this year you can hire young talent on the cheap and still build playoff teams as both Bowman and Byron advanced to the round of 12.

Stenhouse is now part of a free agent market in which some drivers bring sponsorship and buy their seats, while others take discounted one-year deals with very little stability for team, driver or series. Massive pay cuts are the norm for the veterans, and someone like Stenhouse is going to be lucky to find anything close to what he earned through 10 years with Roush.

Wallace, meanwhile, is driving for underfunded Richard Petty Motorsports with limited resources. He’s got the personality to transcend beyond motorsports, but doesn’t have the success to pull in lucrative sponsors.

Bowman was racing this weekend to keep his title chances intact. Wallace races each week trying to do enough to keep the doors open at RPM.

So he was ticked when Bowman spun him on purpose — just because he took exception to the Wallace giving him the finger after being spun on the first lap.

Wallace could have retaliated at any point of the race and ended Bowman’s playoff chances. He instead waited until the race had concluded and did it face-to-face. Fans seem horrified that Wallace had the nerve to throw a beverage on a driver receiving medical treatment, and are calling for Wallace to be in very big trouble with NASCAR.

It can’t be both ways, though.

NASCAR has gone through long stretches of milquetoast racing, where nothing of significant interest happens and everyone seems to be going through the motions trying to get to the end of the season. Charlotte proved there’s still enough left in the tank to ignite the fan base and make people care about what’s happening with both the race and the business of racing.

If NASCAR could bottle the passion displayed at Charlotte and carry it week after week from February until November, it would find itself on far steadier footing. It’s important that people care about what’s happening, and Charlotte showed that many still do.

Police reports 10/1

Vehicles collide

Drivers of both vehicles suffered what law enforcement described as possible injuries following a two-vehicle collision in Iola Friday.

Zaviera J. Evans, 18, was crossing West Street while northbound on Chestnut Street, when she failed to yield at the intersection, Iola police officers said, and struck a westbound vehicle driven by Lucinda J. Witt, 60.

 

Topper damaged

Iola police officers were told the back window of a pickup topper owned by Margaret M. Ator was damaged sometime between Friday and Sunday, while the vehicle was parked in the 500 block of North Chestnut Street.

An investigation continues.

Colony church: Fear can cause loss of faith

COLONY — Sunday was Youth Sunday at Colony Christian Church, so the Communion Meditation was given by Trevor Kennington. Everyone feels fear, he said. The fear of losing someone, doing bad, etc., can cause some people to lose their faith. John 15:13 tells us there is no greater love than to lay down your life for a friend. (John 10:11).

Pastor Chase Riebel continued with his “Sermon on the Mount: The Beatitudes” series. God blesses those who are humble, and they will inherit the whole earth. (Ref: Matthew 5:5-12; Psalm 127:3-5; Matt 19:14-15, 21:5 & 32, 15:19; 1 Peter 3:3-4; Romans 10:3 & 6:13; Philippians 3:9; John 13:11; 2 Timothy 2:22). 

Listen to this sermon in its entirety at http://www.colonychristianchurch.org.

Men’s Bible study is at 7 a.m. Tuesdays. Youth group will meet at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday before going to a high school pep rally. Adult Bible study is at 7 p.m. Wednesday. There will be no meal this week prior to the Bible study.

Gov. Kelly reviews Medicaid expansion

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly has opened a review of options for expanding Medicaid in Kansas with warnings against work requirements and a limited expansion.

Kelly gave opening remarks Monday at the first meeting of a council she appointed to provide the Republican-controlled Legislature with policy guidance ahead of next year’s expected debate on the issue.

Kelly said she wants the council to develop “guiding principles” for lawmakers. She described work requirements and a limited Medicaid expansion as ideas that haven’t worked well in other states.

The governor took office in January pushing to expand the state’s Medicaid health coverage for as many as 150,000 additional residents. An expansion plan passed the House, but conservative GOP leaders blocked it in the Senate, expressing concerns about its potential costs to the state.