Historical Society examines Korea

MORAN — The 2019 Allen County Historical Society’s annual meeting is at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Jones Hardy American Legion Post No. 385 in Moran, 237 Spruce St.

A program about the Korean War follows at 7 o’clock.

The discussion will feature photos, uniforms and a talk with Bill Mentzer, who served in Korea.

The public is invited.

The Historical Society will provide refreshments during the event.

Court Report

DISTRICT COURT

Judge Daniel Creitz

Civil cases filed:

State of Kansas ex rel DCF vs. Summer S. Schulenberg, other domestic

Sharon K. Jennings vs. Tony Winn, landlord/tenant

Marriage licenses issued:

Tryston Ingle and Tehya C. Bass

Nickolas G. Anderson and Rebecca A. Taylor

 

MAGISTRATE COURT

Judge Tod Davis

Convicted of no seat belt and fined $30:

Jeffrey S. Roberts, Colony

Trenton L. Pollet, Iola

Andrew W. Cook, Pittsburg

Alyssa J. Lampe, Gas

Zane G. Valentine, LaHarpe

Kayla L. Sutter, Fort Scott, no seatbelt, no child passenger restraint, $198

Donna E. Harris, Walnut

Athanasios V. Markou, Lafayette, La.

Judith K. Croan, Blue Mound

Buddy B. Curry, McCracken

Melissa R. Curry, McCracken

Convicted of speeding:

Rolando O. Murillo, Tulsa, Okla., 75/65, $153

Jose Alvarado, Corpus Christi, Texas, 75/65, $153

Ashlynn R. Booth, Humboldt, 75/65, $153

Jessica C. Walker, Kansas City, Mo., 75/65, $275

Brandon S. Kinzer, Iola, 75/65, $275

Julie M. Charest, Kansas City, Mo., 75/65, $153

Tammy L. Holcomb, Nevada, Mo., 78/65, $171

Stephen J. Bowe, Troy, 75/65, $153

Jan R. Erpelding, Crete, Neb., 50/45, $153

Emmanuel Kwayke, Noblesville, Ind., 75/65, $153

Benjamin W. Gant, Bartlesville, Okla., 75/65, $153

Robert J. Johnson, Owasso, Okla., 75/65, $153

Savaughn Carter, Raytown, Mo., 75/65, $153

Kira S. Hartz, Chanute, 76/55, $244

Charlotte N. Carrieo, Tulsa, Okla., 80/65, $183

Robert D. Matheson, Oakdale, La., 82/65, $195

Kip N. Kelley, Kansas City, Kan., 80/65, $305

Sri S.N. Chilamakurthi, Olathe, 94/65, $294

Convicted as follows:

Marcus L. McVay, Jr., 75/65, no registration, no driver’s license, excessive window tint, $573

Johnny M. Brown, Jr., possession of marijuana, $968

Angela Ramos Camacho, Oklahoma City, Okla., no driver’s license, $228

Llami Gomez-Arriaga, Fort Worth, Texas, no driver’s license, $108

Maisy J. Dorsey, Iola, expired registration, $350

Morgan R. McCullough, LaHarpe, DUI

Criminal cases filed:

Jeffrey D. Mitchell, Humboldt, three counts of lewd and lascivious behavior

Maisy J. Dorsey, Iola, DUI, driving while suspended

Ronald R. Poffenbarger, Iola, possession of drug paraphernalia

Darla J. Boudreaux, Humboldt, possession of a depressant drug, Tramadol

Brian K. McAdam, Moran, two counts of battery on a law enforcement officer

Jason T. Sinclair, Iola, interference with a law enforcement officer

Contract cases filed:

Capital One Bank (USA) NA vs. Katharine A. Haen

Portfolio Recovery Associates LLC vs. Kelli Boone

Wilhoit Properties dba Blackshine LLC vs. Dakota L. Mitchell, Savanna D. McCulley, Levon L. Hogue, Shawn L. McCulley and Tarisha Smith

Synchrony Bank vs. Kathleen Allen

 

IOLA MUNICIPAL COURT

Judge Patti Boyd

Convicted of speeding:

Tyris J. Sisson, Wichita, 35/25, $282

Convicted as follows with fines assessed:

Jerrimiah J. Boothe, Yates Center, criminal trespass, $315, probation ordered

Aaron M. Dix, Humboldt, DUI, transportation of alcoholic beverage, 58/30, $1,577, probation ordered

Victoria E. Jenkins, Le Roy, abusing toxic vapors, $405, probation ordered

Wayne L.A. Kirkland, Garnett, criminal trespass, $525, probation ordered

William T.A. Phillips, Parsons, no insurance, failure to signal, $545

Ronald L. Porter, Iola, criminal damage, assault, $555, probation ordered

Annie J. Tush, Iola, criminal trespass, $315, probation ordered

 

 

 

 

 

HMS announces first-quarter honor rolls

HUMBOLDT — Humboldt Middle School has announced its first quarter honor rolls for 2019-20.

Eighth grade

All A’s — Landon Bauer, Alexus Black, Shaylea Brinkmeyer, Garren Goodner and Byron Westbrook.

Teacher’s Honor Roll — Emma B’Hymer, Helaina Crhyssikos, Nastassya Goforth, Kenisyn Hottenstein, Sam Hull, Danica Modlin, Patrick Reeder, Alejandro Vargas-Garcia, Elizabeth White and Ashlynn Works.

Regular Honor Roll — Addison Bauer-Onnen, Rylan Covey, Drayk Farrill, Stephen Leo, Bradley Lowry and Mateo Miller.

Seventh grade

All A’s — Sydnea Bumstead, Gracie Dillow, Aisley Galloway, Anna Heisler, Jaryt Hess and Shelby Shaughnessy.

Teacher’s Honor Roll — Sophia Barlow, Shyann Bushong, Colden Cook, Faith Coykendall, Bailey Croisant, Chase DeMeritt, Blake Ellis, Teygan Ewing, Cassidy Friend, Carsyn Galloway, Cooper Gillespie, Asher Hart, Kyler Isbell, McKenna Jones, Jenna Malloy, Matthew McCullough, Logan Page, Annalysia Prock, Adrian Smoot, Gunner Stone, Cody White and Avery Works.

Regular Honor Roll — Jacob Harrington, Brylie Helm, Jada Malloy, Elizabeth Neeley, Drake Ratcliff, Tymber Shultz, Kimber Smoot, Laken Splane and Chanlynn Wrestler.

Sixth grade

All A’s — Harper Dye, Darryl Farrill, Ricklyn Hillmon, Skylar Hottenstein, Laney Hull, Teghen Jaro, Mark McCullough, Victoria Melendez, Jayli Reno and Mason Sterling.

Teacher’s Honor Roll — Lillian Albin, Alyssa Ballard, Kalyn Baughn, Bailey Berkenmeier, Brooke Berkenmeier, Josey Ellis, Layne Ellison, Emmie Hole, Taner King, Lilli Reeder, Carson Russell, Avion Seemster, Creed Shannon, Tatum Tribble, Rylee Woods and Kendall Works.

Regular Honor Roll — Harliegh Anderson, Akayah Atwell, Matthew Bushong, Grady Elder, Aiden Galloway, Braxton Gray, Aiden Hartman, Carol Henderson, Alexandra Rensing and Elizabeth Romine.

Works family honored by K-State

The Works family will be recognized today as the Family of the Year at Family Day at Kansas State University in Manhattan.

Six generations of the Works family have attended KSU, beginning in 1867 with Olive Pickett Dodge, the grandmother of the late Jane Dodge Works of Humboldt, according to the family’s application for the honor.

The Chimes Junior Honorary selects the Family of the Year and sponsors the annual competition.

“The Works family has been dedicated to K-State for more than 152 years, and we are so excited to honor them as the 2019 Family of the Year,” said Janie Failor, a co-chair of the Chimes selection committee, in a press release.

Jane Works’s five children — Bob, Virginia, Joe, Dick and Fred — all attended K-State, as have seven of her grandchildren.

“Jane Dodge Works espoused a family culture that encouraged her family members to be more than just students while at K-State,” said John Works, Jane Works’s nephew, who nominated the family for the award. “She encouraged her children and grandchildren to contribute and invest their time and talent to enhance both their K-State experience and better K-State for students who would follow.”

The following family members will accept the award to be presented during the football game against Oklahoma:

From Humboldt: Joe Works, ‘71, and Janie Wollen Works, ‘71; Tony Works, ‘98, and Kate Vantuyl Works, former student, and their children, Eli, Avery and Owen; Josh Works, ‘05, and Jess Talamantez Works, ‘01, and their children Jack and Cody Ballou; Dick Works, ‘75, and Karen Wiley Works, ‘76, and John Works, ‘81; Seth Barlow and Sophie Barlow; and James and Andrea Works, and the children Britnee, Ashlynn and Kendall.

From Iola: Fred Works, ‘79, and Judy Nott Works, former student, and their children Dylan, ‘14, Abby, ‘16, and Colby, a current KSU student.

From Manhattan: Virginia Works Petersen, ‘69, and Jeff Petersen.

From Overland Park: Ada Works, ‘08, and Kayla Briggeman Works, ‘07, and their children Ethan and Eliza.

From Houston: Sarah Works McIntire, ‘12, ‘14, and Mike McIntire, ‘12, ‘14, and their daughter, Charlotte.

Police report

Arrests reported

Ernest Harbold, 41, Iola, was arrested by Iola police Thursday for suspicion of driving while suspended at the intersection of Lincoln and Elm streets.

Officers arrested Christopher W. Hibbs, 33, Humboldt, for suspicion of theft Monday in the 200 block of South State Street.

 

Iolan cited

Nickolas Trester, 28, Iola, was cited for suspicion of no liability insurance and improper registration during a traffic stop Wednesday at the intersection of Chestnut and Neosho streets, officers said.

 

Fusions fused

Ford Fusions driven by Isabella C. Duke, 18, and Haley M. Carlin, 17, collided Oct. 18 as both were backing from parking stalls at the same time at Iola High School.

Neither was injured.

 

Vehicles collide

Rebecca J. Wright, 21, and  Tobi M. Conner, 31, collided Monday while both vehicles were in the 200 block of North State Street.

Iola police officers said Wright was southbound and turned in front of Conner’s northbound vehicle when the accident occurred.

Neither was hurt.

Kansas criminal threat law unconstitutional

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court has struck down part of a state law against making a criminal threat after concluding it violates free speech rights.

The court on Friday declared unconstitutional a provision of the law making it illegal to communicate a threat of violence with “reckless disregard” of the risk that it might cause fear.

The justices said that part of the law is so broad that it could affect the speech of political protesters and violates the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Domestic violence sweep nets 18 arrests in Kansas

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Shawnee County authorities have arrested 18 people and served 23 warrants during a domestic violence crackdown.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the sweep occurred Wednesday, as part of the 17th annual National Family Violence and Apprehension Detail. Shawnee County Sheriff Brian Hill says more than 300 law enforcement agencies from 29 states participated.

Of the 18 arrests in Shawnee County, 14 were for domestic violence suspects, clearing 18 warrants. Four other arrests were for other crimes, clearing five warrants.

Kansas becomes 8th state to report livestock disease

GOODLAND, Kan. (AP) — A disease that causes blister-like sores on the mouths of horses and other livestock has spread to Kansas, marking the eighth state where it has been detected.

The Kansas Department of Agriculture announced Thursday in a news release that the vesicular stomatitis virus has been confirmed in horses at a private residence in Sherman County, along the state’s western border with Colorado. The animals have been quarantined.

The virus primarily sickens horses, but can also affect cattle, sheep, goats, swine, llamas and alpacas. Symptoms include excessive salivation, lesions, lack of appetite and lameness. The most common method of transmission is insect bites.

Humans can become infected while handling sick animals and develop flu-like symptoms, but that’s rare. The virus also has been detected in areas of Colorado, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah and Wyoming.

As fires rage, California faces historic blackouts

HEALDSBURG, Calif. ? Firefighters struggled Friday against a wildfire burning across Sonoma County wine country as Northern California braced for a weekend of intense winds, critical fire danger and mass power outages.

The Kincade fire has burned more than 16,000 acres in northern Sonoma County. It has forced thousands to flee their homes.

The entire town of Geyserville and vineyards in the region were forced to evacuate as the blaze, pushed by wind gusts topping 70 mph, burned out of control.

Some Geyserville residents evacuated in the darkness after PG&E shut power off to areas in Sonoma County and the Kincade fire crossed California 128, moving west toward homes in the town of 929 people.

Fire officials said 49 structures were destroyed and the Geysers geothermal facilities run by Calpine Corp. reported some damage.

The cause of the fire was still under investigation, but some suspicion was already turning to transmission lines owned by embattled Pacific Gas & Electric.

PG&E, which went bankrupt after some of California?s most destructive fires were tied to malfunctions of its lines, said Thursday that one of its transmission lines experienced problems Wednesday night around the area where the fire broke out.

In a mandatory report sent to the California Public Utilities Commission, the company said one of its workers noticed that the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection had taped off the area. PG&E said Cal Fire also pointed out a ?broken jumper on the same tower.?

PG&E had been shutting off power to residents to avoid fires sparked by electric lines. The utility company said nearly 28,000 people in Sonoma County, including Geyserville and the surrounding area, lost power when distribution lines were shut off at 3 p.m. Wednesday. The company said transmission lines, which operate at a higher voltage, remained energized at the time the fire started.

Transmission lines generally carry electricity from power plants to substations. Distribution lines deliver power directly to homes and businesses.

PG&E has cut off power to millions to avoid more power line-sparked fires.

But this weekend?s planned power outages could be the largest yet in California.

PG&E, which has 5.4 million electric customers and provides power to 16 million Californians, was projecting Thursday that it could shut off power across nearly all of its territory in Northern California on Sunday and Monday because of ferocious gusts.

?This system will likely be the strongest event of the year from a wind perspective,? the utility said on its website. ?Federal forecast agencies are in alignment that this will be a high-risk weather event.?

Madonna Tavares, 70, of Geyserville said she could hardly see a foot in front of her because of the thick smoke as she rushed to evacuate from her home. With the power out, she and her husband scrambled in the dark to get dressed, find their two small dogs and jump in their car.

?They shut off the power and we still had a fire,? she said. ?I don?t understand it.?

The couple heard news reports about the fire Wednesday evening near the River Rock Casino but said it appeared to have died down by the time they went to sleep around midnight. At 5:30 a.m., they were awakened by a loud bang at the door.

?Get out! Get out!? the Tavareses? landlord shouted.

Tavares said it wasn?t until she and her husband were safe in the Healdsburg Community Center that she finally broke down in tears.

?I really hope (the house) didn?t burn down,? she said. ?We?ve been there four years. We just finished furnishing the place. I painted the whole inside, and we just got it the way we liked. Now the fire will take that away.?

State leaders have blasted PG&E ? which blacked out about 750,000 customers in Northern and Central California starting on Oct. 9 _ for not being more selective with its power outages. The utility?s outages this week have been far smaller, affecting only 179,000 customers. But this weekend could swing wildly in the other direction, illustrating the unpredictability of weather conditions and electrical power decisions, both of which are out of the control of frustrated state politicians.

At a news conference Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom again criticized PG&E and other utilities for not making prior investments to systems in the face of climate change and mounting wildfire threats. He said PG&E must be held accountable.

?This is unacceptable,? said Newsom, who faces political risks from the continuing power outages. ?Issues of corporate greed meeting issues of climate change have created these conditions.?

Where Southern California Edison may turn off power

PG&E filed for bankruptcy in January, largely because of liabilities it faced from causing past fires.

At a news conference Thursday night, company officials said the potential area for this weekend?s outages could be as broad as the one that put millions in the dark in early October and could start as early as this evening. PG&E President and Chief Executive Bill Johnson added there was ?elevated potential? the shut-off could last longer than the outage that started Oct. 8.

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U.S. says it will send troops back into Syria to protect oil fields

BRUSSELS (AP) — The United States will send armored vehicles and combat troops into eastern Syria to keep oil fields from potentially falling into the hands of Islamic State militants, U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Friday.

It was the latest sign that extracting the military from Syria is more uncertain and complicated than President Donald Trump is making it out to be. Though Trump repeatedly says he is pulling out of Syria, the reality on the ground is different.

Adding armored reinforcements in the oil-producing area of Syria could mean sending several hundred U.S. troops — even as a similar number are being withdrawn from a separate mission closer to the border with Turkey where Russian forces have been filling the vacuum.

Esper described the added force as “mechanized,” which means it likely will include armored vehicles such as Bradley armored infantry carriers and possibly tanks, although details were still be worked out. This reinforcement would introduce a new dimension to the U.S. military presence , which largely has been comprised of special operations forces not equipped with tanks or other armored vehicles.

Esper spoke at a news conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels, where he consulted with American allies.

Sending an armored force to eastern Syria would partially reverse the ongoing shrinkage of the U.S. troop presence in Syria. Trump has ordered the withdrawal of nearly all 1,000 U.S. troops who had been partnering with a Syrian Kurdish-led militia against the Islamic State group. That withdrawal is proceeding even as Esper announced the plan to put reinforcements in the oil-producing area.

Speaking to reporters Friday at the White House, Trump said the U.S.-brokered agreement with Turkey to halt its offensive against U.S.-supporting Syrian Kurdish fighters was a win for his administration. That offensive began after Trump announced U.S. troops would not stand in the way, though he also said the U.S. would punish Turkey’s economy if the country acted inhumanely.

He also said anew on Friday that “we’re getting our troops out” of Syria, without mentioning Esper’s announcement.

“We are doing well in Syria, with Turkey and everybody else that we’re dealing with,” Trump said. “We have secured the oil. … We have a couple of people that came knocking, we said don’t knock. And I think I would say that things are going very well.”

White House officials would not clarify whom he was referring to as “knocking.”

The U.S. special envoy for Syria, James Jeffrey, said in Geneva on Friday he had talked to a Russian official about an unspecified issue in Syria’s oil region.

“We are currently very concerned about certain developments in the south, in the Deir el-Zour area,” Jeffrey said.

“I’ve talked to my Russian colleague about that and we’re having other contacts with the Russians concerning that situation. We think it is under control now.”

Although Esper did not mention the size of the U.S. reinforcements, it could total several hundred troops because fuel-guzzling tanks and other armored vehicles depend on a large supply and logistical support group. One official, who discussed the planning on condition of anonymity because some details remained to be agreed, cautioned that tanks might eventually be eliminated from the mix because of logistical challenges, including air transport.

Russian and Turkish leaders have now divided up security roles in northeast Syria following Trump’s abrupt troop withdrawal from the Turkey-Syrian border region. The American move triggered widespread criticism that the U.S. administration had abandoned the Syrian Kurdish fighters who fought alongside the U.S. against IS for several years.

Esper’s announcement came even as Trump again indicated in tweets that the U.S. military mission in Syria is complete. He previously has acknowledged a willingness to help protect the oil fields in eastern Syria, suggesting they could benefit the Kurds as well as the United States, although those resources belong to the Syrian government.

“Oil is secured,” Trump tweeted Friday. “Our soldiers have left and are leaving Syria for other places, then…. COMING HOME! … When these pundit fools who have called the Middle East wrong for 20 years ask what we are getting out of the deal, I simply say, THE OIL, AND WE ARE BRINGING OUR SOLDIERS BACK HOME, ISIS SECURED!”

Asked about America’s shifting Syria strategy, Esper said the U.S. mission has always been to prevent the resurgence of IS. “That mission remains unchanged,” he said.

But Esper said at NATO that the U.S. is “considering how we might reposition forces in the area in order to ensure we secure the oil field.” He added: “We are reinforcing that position. It will include some mechanized forces.”

He made clear the main purpose is to prevent IS from regaining access to Syrian oil, which prior to 2017 was a major source of its revenue.

Starting in late 2015 and continuing for many months, the U.S. conducted airstrikes against a range of oil resources in the Deir el-Zour province that had been taken over by IS. The attacks damaged or knocked out oil tanker convoys, oil processing plants, storage facilities, pumping stations, pipelines and refineries. It was called Operation Tidal Wave II, after a World War II air campaign to hit Romania’s oil industry.

Esper said IS must not be allowed to again threaten the oil.

“If ISIS has access to the resources, and therefore the means to procure arms or to buy fighters or whatever else they do, then it means it makes it more difficult to defeat ISIS,” he said.

Just last week, Trump insisted that all American forces in Syria would come home. Then he said the 1,000 in the north would return home and that American troops in the south, numbering about 200 at the Al-Tanf garrison in the south, would stay.

Trump in the past days has turned a greater focus on the Syrian oil facilities in the eastern part of the country, saying U.S. will stay in Syria to protect them.

According to officials, top military leaders have pushed for the U.S. to leave forces in Syria to guard against an IS resurgence. While the group’s physical zone of control was largely destroyed by U.S. and Syrian Kurdish forces, insurgents remain in small pockets throughout the country and in Iraq.