Iola High School baseball standouts Cal Leonard, seated from left, and Calvin Delich signed letters of intent Friday to play collegiately at Washburn and Central Missouri University, respectively, next year. The pair, who played key roles in the Mustangs 2018 state championship, are flanked by family and coaches, from left, Mac Leonard, Steve and Camille Leonard, Troy Smith, Mark Percy, Ryan Latta and Bill and Jenny Delich.
Billings signs with ACC
Elka Billings, second from right, signs to continue her cross country career at Allen Community College. In the front row left to right, Elka is joined by mother Erika Billings, ACC coach Vince DeGrado, and father Mike Billings. In the back row is Crest track coach Zach Mason, and Crest XC coach Kaitlyn Dispensa. REGISTER/ERICK MITCHELL
Myles Garrett suspended indefinitely
CLEVELAND (AP) Myles Garrett is done playing for the Cleveland Browns this season. The NFL isnt saying when the star defensive end will play again.
Garrett was suspended for at least the rest of the regular season and postseason by the league Friday, hours after he shockingly used a helmet as a weapon by striking Pittsburgh quarterback Mason Rudolph in the head.
Garretts violent outburst in the final seconds of Thursdays nationally televised game against the Steelers landed him the longest suspension for a single on-field infraction in league history. Tennessees Albert Haynesworth was suspended five games in 2006.
The leagues No. 1 overall pick in 2017 was also fined an undisclosed amount and Garrett must meet with Commissioner Roger Goodells office before his reinstatement is considered.
After wrestling Rudolph to the ground as the Browns were closing out a rare win over their rivals, Garrett ripped off the quarterbacks helmet and clobbered him on top of the head, triggering a benches-clearing brawl that capped another physical game between the AFC North teams.
I made a terrible mistake, Garrett said in a statement Friday. I lost my cool and what I did was selfish and unacceptable. I know that we are all responsible for our actions and I can only prove my true character through my actions moving forward. I want to apologize to Mason Rudolph, my teammates, our entire organization, our fans and to the NFL. I know I have to be accountable for what happened, learn from my mistake and I fully intend to do so.
Rudolph, who suffered a concussion earlier this season, avoided serious injury and said after the game the defensive star’s attack was “cowardly and bush league.” That sentiment was shared across the league and sports world.
The league said Garrett violated unnecessary roughness and unsportsmanlike conduct rules, as well as fighting and removing an opponents helmet and using it as a weapon.
Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey, who was doing all he could to separate Garrett and Rudolph, was suspended three games without pay and also fined for punching and kicking Garrett. Browns defensive tackle Larry Ogunjobi was suspended for one game. He shoved Rudolph to the ground from behind during the melee.
The suspended players have three business days to appeal their penalties.
The Steelers and Browns were also fined $250,000 each.
There is no place for that in football and that is not reflective of the core values we strive for as an organization, Browns owners Dee and Jimmy Haslam said in a statement. We sincerely apologize to Mason Rudolph and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Myles Garrett has been a good teammate and member of our organization and community for the last three years but his actions last night were completely unacceptable. We understand the consequences from the league for his actions.
Dioceses link abortion, Medicaid debates
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) The four Catholic dioceses in Kansas will not support expanding Medicaid to thousands more low-income adults and children unless the state passes a constitutional amendment and new laws restricting abortion, the head of the Kansas Catholic Conference said.
Chuck Weber, the groups executive director, told a joint House and Senate committee on Wednesday that the dioceses in Dodge City, Salina, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, want an amendment to the state constitution to clarify that it does not include a right to abortion, in response to a Kansas Supreme Court ruling last year that the constitution protects that right. The dioceses also are seeking a law allowing medical professionals or health facilities to decline to perform certain procedures for religious reasons, The Topeka Capital-Journal reported.
Hundreds of thousands of Kansans are members of the Catholic church and, on social issues, it is influential with conservative Republicans, who hold the top leadership positions in the GOP-controlled Legislature.
Webers statements came as the committee ended two days of hearings on expanding Medicaid to 130,000 low-income adults and children in Kansas. Medicaid currently covers about 342,000 low-income, elderly and disabled Kansas residents.
Rep. Brenda Landwehr, a Wichita Republican who chairs the committee, said Wednesday that the panel wont advance a bill on Medicaid expansion to this years Legislature and wont recommend passage of a bill. The committees decision to not advance a bill is not binding and lawmakers are still expected to take up Medicaid expansion in this years session.
Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly has made Medicaid expansion one of her top priorities for the upcoming session. Her Republican predecessors, Govs. Sam Brownback and Jeff Colyer, successfully blocked expansion by the GOP-led Legislature. During last years legislative session, the House passed an expansion bill that was not acted on by the Senate. A special Senate committee in October endorsed an alternative developed by Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning of Overland Park.
The committee did approve a motion by Rep. Will Carpenter, R-El Dorado, that would prohibit Medicaid expansion from broadening access to abortion and would allow health care providers to refuse to provide patient care, such as birth control, based on the providers personal beliefs.
You dont care about religious beliefs of patients? said Sen. Barbara Bollier, a Mission Hills Democrat running for the U.S. Senate.
Im not concerned with that, Carpenter said.
Lee Norman, a physician and secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said a religious exemption in Kansas could be perilous and that placing ethical boundaries on Medicaid could make it difficult to attract health care providers.
The joint committee also voted to add a requirement that Medicaid applicants who are able must work at least 20 hours per week or enroll in 12 credit hours of college courses to be eligible. The federal government has approved work mandates for other states but all have been blocked by the courts.
April Holman, executive director of the Alliance for a Health Kansas the states largest coalition supporting Medicaid expansion said the House bill and Senate committee proposal required low-wage people signing up under Kansas expanded Medicaid system to pay monthly insurance premiums that could be difficult to afford. She also questioned a provision in the House bill that permanently locks out of Medicaid any person who misses three premium payments and the Senate committees preference to lock people out for six months if a premium payment was missed.
Court report
DISTRICT COURT
Judge Daniel Creitz
Civil cases filed:
Maya Piper vs. Coby Cochran, paternity
State of Kansas ex rel DCF vs. Christopher R. Marlow, other domestic
State of Kansas ex rel DCF vs. Scott E. Black and Wyatt D. George, paternity
MAGISTRATE COURT
Judge Tod Davis
Convicted of no seat belt and fined $30:
Roland M. Spillman, Moran
Dennis L. Cramer, Humboldt
Misty M. Cumplido, Iola
Phillip E. Mock, Iola
James A. Pass, Chanute
Hanna R. Bartlett, Harrisonville, Mo.
Mandy R. Connolly, Iola
Stephen D. Bender Jr., Iola
Convicted of speeding:
Kevin D. Collins, Kansas City, Kan., 81/65, $189
Christina L. Dockery, Kansas City, Mo., 75/65, $153
Dreschaun M. McCallop, Overland Park, 80/65, $183
Tiffanie R. Tidd, Piqua, 75/65, $153
Paxton C. Bryan, Silsbee, Texas, 85/65, $213
Gary L. Stout, Iola, 75/65, $153
Douglas C. Redding, Sapulpa, Okla., 85/65, $213
Debora O. Belvoir, South Pasadena, Calif., 83/65, $201
Emilina C. Hernandez, Tyler, Texas, 93/65, $285
Karen M. Berge, Bloomington, Minn., 78/65, $171
Jeffrey B. Zimmerman, Overland Park, 75/65, $178
Kellin M. Koenig, Gladstone, Mo., 82/65, $220
Brett M. Rogers, Tulsa, Okla., 75/65, $153
Lydia E. Lawlor, Olathe, 75/65, $153
Rigoberto Sanchez Gonzalez, Bixby, Okla., 75/65, $153
Russell R. Ryman, Iola, 65/55, $153
Bruce A. Turner, Kansas City, Mo., 75/65, $153
Ryan D. Lewis, Lenexa, 84/65, $207
Michael S. Witt, Lawrence, 75/65, $153
Eriana D. Parrish, Lawrence, 84/65, $213
Ragan W. Foster, Overland Park, 75/65, $153
Ginger J. Nelson, Iola, 75/65, $153
Alexandra J. Gulin, Roeland Park, 75/65, $153
Marcel J. Powell, Olathe, 75/65, $153
Jennifer A. Lewis, Santa Rosa, Calif., 75/65, $153
Rainela E.D.V.D Marcano Villarroel, Rapid City, S.D., 85/65, $213
Taylor D. Miller, Lees Summit, Mo., 75/65, $153
Keven M. Wilson, Jonesboro, Ga., 79/65, $177
Marilyn J. Sunseri, Plymouth, Minn., 85/65, $213
Andy M. Huynh, Muskogee, Okla., 80/65, $183
Isaiah R. Gawlas, Chanute, 88/65, $240
Convicted as follows:
Daniel G. Bell, Chanute, no registration, $228
Mark E. Snavely, Iola, gross weight limits for vehicles, $323
Joshua D. Butler, Iola, motor carriers required to stop at inspection stations, $395
Alecia M. Sutton, Iola, no insurance, $818
Megan L. Thieman, Moran, driving while suspended, $1,768, five days jail
Susan D. Fienen, Independence, driving on left in no-passing zone, $183
Tim Fisher, Chanute, driving while suspended, $803, six months probation
Brandon A. Aiello, LaHarpe, failure to yield, $533
Loyal T. Fulton, Chanute, permitting unauthorized minor to drive, $177
Don Diebolt, Iola, giving a worthless check, $158
Michael J. Houk, Iola, endangering a child, possession of drug paraphernalia, $568
Criminal cases filed:
Christin L. Menan, Nevada, Mo., pedestrian under the influence, interference with law enforcement officer
Blayke Reynolds, Iola, aggravated endangering a child, contributing to a childs misconduct, criminal restraint
Gary G. Wagner, Iola, aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer with a deadly weapon, DUI, fleeing or attempting to elude
Contract cases filed:
Madeline Cooper vs. Troy Gilliland
Madeline Cooper vs. Karen Splechter and Brandy Standifer
Capital One Bank (USA) NA vs. Mike D. Rogers
Olathe Medical Center Inc., vs. Carrel J. and Cindy Todd
Olathe Medical Center Inc., vs. Rebecca and Michael R. Hedman
Allen County Hospital vs. Rodney E. Westhoff
Allen County Hospital vs. John A. Lammey
Allen County Hospital vs. Rebecca L. Adair Rankin
Galt Ventures LLC vs. Jonathan Lushbough
Unifund CCR LLC vs. Jerimiah M. Coykendall
Small Claims filed:
Michelle L. Diebolt vs. Brian Scheimann
IOLA MUNICIPAL COURT
Judge Patti Boyd
Convicted of speeding:
Kyle G.C. Cuppy, Iola, 45/35, $155
Tristan E. Fraker, Iola, 44/35, $155
Bradi L. Ore, Lakewood, Colo., 40/30, $155
Devon M. Wilson-Wing, Iola, 45/35, $155
Zachary E. Wise, Elsmore, 45/35, $155
Convicted as follows with fines assessed:
Rhonda K. Caglel-Conover, Iola, driving wrong direction on one-way road, $195
Harmony R. Clark, Iola, criminal trespass, $315, probation ordered
Joel W. Curry, Iola, parking zone violation, $30
Ernest C. Harbold, Iola, driving while suspended, $315
Augustus R. Martiello, McAllen, Texas, theft, $352.37
Levi K. Martin, Iola, driving while suspended, $1,825, probation ordered
Naomi G. Neal, Iola, failure to yield, $195
Matric D. Scott, Iola, criminal carry of a weapon, $565, probation ordered
Police report
Arrest reported
Andrew Jaimez, 33, Laharpe, was arrested by Iola police officers Tuesday evening for suspicion of driving under the influence in the 10 block of West Campbell Street.
Citation issued
Iola police officers cited James Hosack for suspicion of battery and disorderly conduct Thursday evening in the 500 block of North Second Street.
Theft reported
Iola Walmart employees reported a theft Wednesday. Charges have been requested in the incident, officers said.
Televisions taken
Patrick Thomas told officers Wednesday afternoon somebody entered his residence in the 200 block of South Chestnut Street and stole a pair of televisions. The value was placed at $270, officers said. An investigation continues.
Parked vehicle hit
Elanie R. Sturgeon, 15, was backing from a parking stall in front of Iola High School Monday evening when she struck a parked vehicle owned by Aaron T. Franklin. Franklins car was legally parked along Cottonwood Street when it was hit, Iola police officers said.
Poll: It’s hard to believe what anyone tells you
WASHINGTON (AP) ? In a sharply divided country, here?s something many Americans agree on: It?s hard to know what?s a true and honest fact.
A new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and USA Facts finds that regardless of political belief, many Americans say they have a hard time figuring out if information is true. Nearly two-thirds of Americans say they often come across one-sided information and about 6 in 10 say they regularly see conflicting reports about the same set of facts from different sources.
?It is difficult to get facts. You have to read between the lines. You have to have a lot of common sense,? said Leah Williams, 29, of Modesto, California. A Republican, Williams says she relies on like-minded friends and family to help sort through conflicting information. ?There are wolves in sheep?s clothing everywhere.?
The poll found that 47% of Americans believe it?s difficult to know if the information they encounter is true, compared with 31% who find it easy to do so. When deciding whether something is factual, there is widespread consensus on the importance of transparency in how the information was gathered and if it is based on data. Democrats and Republicans alike frequently find the process challenging.
But as a president with a history of making false statements and repeating debunked conspiracy theories faces public hearings this week in only the fourth impeachment inquiry in the nation?s history, the poll finds that differing political beliefs led Americans down different paths as they try to determine what?s a unquestionable fact.
Democrats are more likely to say they rely on scientists and academics, while Republicans are more likely to trust what they hear from President Donald Trump.
?When I hear him on Fox News ? that?s where I get all my information,? said Al Corra, a 48-year-old Republican from Midland, Texas. Trump, he said, is the easiest way to cut through an otherwise confusing information environment.
Republicans are more likely than Democrats to put a great deal of trust in the president?s statements, 40% to 5%. Overall, a majority of Americans (61%) have little to no trust in information about the government when it comes from Trump,
Corra said he distrusts academics as too ?liberal? and he?s not alone in that regard among Republicans. More Democrats than Republicans say they consider something to be factual if it?s been verified by scientists ? 72% versus 40% ? as well as academics ? 57% versus 30%.
President Donald Trump, left, listens to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell during an event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 6. ABACA PRESS/YURI GRIPAS/TNS
Scott Austin, a Democrat from Aurora, Colorado, says he generally trusts scientists, but checks their affiliations carefully because he believes fraudulent information abounds. ?If I see something that some scientist from Stanford says, I?ll believe that because it?s Stanford,? he said.
Austin, a 52-year-old Army veteran, says he has to ping-pong from website to website to try to verify facts and has found himself increasingly skeptical of government information. Like 54% of Americans, he believes the president has a lot of sway over the information distributed by the government, and that?s made him increasingly skeptical given his lack of trust in what Trump says to be true.
?I never had a problem trusting the government under Democratic or Republican administrations ? until this administration,? Austin said.
Close to half of Americans ? 45% ? also think members of Congress have a lot of influence on information that comes from the government, while just 3 in 10 say the same of federal agency employees.
When it comes to assessing whether information is factual, at least three-quarters of Americans think it?s very important for it to be accurate, and that sources provide all relevant information and explain the way that information was gathered. Smaller majorities say the information should include opposing viewpoints and be devoid of opinion.
About 6 in 10 say they are very likely to consider information factual if it is based on data.
Many Americans say they rely on government websites, as well as news sources and social media, to get information. In total, 54% say they get information about the government from social media at least once a day, 52% say that about local TV news, 50% from national TV news networks and 47% from cable news. About 6 in 10 also say they have used government websites to look up information.
And yet, poll found widespread skepticism about these sources ? majorities say they have little to no confidence in information they get about the government from social media, the president, members of Congress and businesses.
Lynn Joseph, a retired artist in Las Vegas, tries to ferret information out on the internet, but is skeptical of just about all sources nowadays. ?Do I trust anybody? No,? she said. ?My philosophy is everybody?s guilty until proven innocent.?
Joseph, a Republican, is among the modest group of Trump supporters who don?t trust the accuracy of his statements. Overall, about a third of those who approve of the president say they trust information they get from him about the government only a moderate amount, and roughly another quarter say they have little to no trust.
?I?m a Trump supporter, but I know about him,? she said. ?He speaks before he should.?
Veterans travel to Washington
Several area military veterans were part of an Honor Flight contingent that traveled to Washington, D.C., Friday and Saturday, courtesy of an effort spearheaded by Southern Coffey County High School in Le Roy.
Iolans David L. Donovan, who served in Vietnam, Brian David Donovan and Richard Warren Hurst, both of whom served in Iraq, were joined by Vietnam veterans Ronald John Burris, Colony, and Ervin A. Daugherty, Kincaid, as well as Wayne Verlin Smith, Humboldt, a Korean War veteran.
They were among 24 veterans from across the state, accompanied by eight adults and 24 student chaperones.
The visit included stops at Arlington National Cemetery, Iwo Jima Marine Memorial and the Air Force Memorial on the first day. Day twos itinerary included stops at the Navy, World War II, Korean, Lincoln and Vietnam memorials.
This is the 17th such honor flight organized by SCC social science teacher Jeff True and former district secretary Roxi Newkirk.
MEANWHILE, organizers are raising funds for the next Honor Flight trip. Tickets for a raffle drawing will be sold from 8 to 5 Saturday at Iola Walmart.
The prize drawings will be in early December.
Pope decries child porn
VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Francis called today for Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Google and other tech companies to urgently take measures to remove child porn from the web and prevent children from accessing pornography online.
Francis told a Vatican conference of religious leaders and high-tech representatives that its no longer acceptable to merely follow the law in monitoring online content, because technology is fast outpacing regulation.
He said tech and computer software companies should assume a moral responsibility to protect young people from what he said were the ruinous effects of pornography on their emotional and sexual development.
There is a need to ensure that investors and managers remain accountable, so that the good of minors and society is not sacrificed to profit, he said.
Francis was addressing participants at the conference Promoting Digital Child Dignity, which follows on a 2017 conference hosted by the Jesuit university in Rome and a 2018 meeting in Abu Dhabi.
Francis cited obligatory age verification technology and artificial intelligence to eliminate criminal porn from the web as two concrete measures high tech companies and software-makers could take to protect children.
The Vatican has sought to raise awareness about protecting children online as part of its response to the Catholic Churchs dreadful record with clergy sexual abuse. The issue has hit close to home for Francis, after one of his diplomats was sentenced to five years in prison by a Vatican court for viewing child pornography, and one of his own Argentine bishops was placed under investigation by the church after porn was found on his cellphone.
The two-day conference at the Vatican featured speakers from Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google, Facebook and Paramount Pictures, U.N. and EU officials, as well as the spiritual leader of the worlds Orthodox Christians and the grand imam of the Al-Azhar university in Cairo, the seat of Sunni learning. Francis secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, was to close out the conference on Friday, in an indication of the importance the Vatican placed on it.
In his remarks, Francis said technology has obvious benefits for children, but also poses risks and negative effects that often arent apparent until it is too late to remedy them.
He indirectly dismissed claims by Facebook and other social media companies that they are merely platforms for others to share content.
It is now clear that they cannot consider themselves completely unaccountable vis-a-vis the services they provide for their customers, he said. So I make an urgent appeal to them to assume their responsibility toward minors, their integrity and their future.
Bob Henderson
Robert Bob Lee Henderson, age 77, of Moran, died Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, at his home. He was born on Dec. 8, 1941, in Glencoe, Okla., to Martin and Juanita (Hesser) Henderson.
He married Malinda Hockett on Aug. 1, 1963, in Moran.
Survivors include his wife of the home; two sons, Bryan Henderson of Plattsmouth, Neb.; Les Henderson of Moran; one daughter, Sheila Nelson of Plattsmouth, Neb.; and other relatives.
Family will greet friends from 9 to 11 a.m. on Saturday in The Venue at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, Iola. A private burial will take place in the Bronson Cemetery.