State officials warn of deer crashes

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Kansas officials say November is peak season for deer-vehicle collisions, and they’re warning drivers not to swerve abruptly to avoid hitting the animal because that could cause more serious crashes.

Mating season and the quest for more secure habitat and food sources cause the deer to move more often in the fall, said Ron Kaufman, a spokesman for the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism.

“Typically, the greatest number of deer-vehicle crashes are in mid-November, when the rut, or mating season, peaks,” Kaufman said. “In addition to the rut, deer are also on the move in mid-fall seeking new food sources and shelter as crops are harvested and leaves fall from trees and shrubs, leaving them less secure than in their summer habitats.”

State Department of Transportation officials said 16.5% of vehicle crashes in 2018 were deer-related. The Hutchinson News reports that Sedgwick County had the most reported deer-related crashes at 418 followed by Butler County with 384.

Kansas Highway Patrol Lt. Adam Winters advises that it’s best for a driver to hit a deer if they encounter one, rather than try to avoid it.

“Often, we find more serious crashes occur when you swerve to miss the deer, potentially losing control of your vehicle, leaving the road or veering into oncoming traffic,” Winters said.

State agencies also recommend that drivers be especially alert during dawn and dusk hours and reduce speed near wooded areas.

Companies reach tentative deal to settle opioids lawsuit

CLEVELAND (AP) — The nation’s three dominant drug distributors and a big drugmaker have reached a tentative deal to settle a lawsuit related to the opioid crisis just as the first federal trial over the crisis was due to begin this morning, according to a lead lawyer for the local governments suing the drug industry.

The tentative deal, details of which were to be announced later today, settles claims by state and local governments against distributors AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and McKessen and the manufacturer Teva.

After five drug manufacturers, including Johnson & Johnson, reached settlements leading up to the trial, it became clear that the focus would be largely on the behavior of the distributors. Opening arguments were scheduled to begin today in U.S. District Court in Cleveland for the case involving claims bought by the Ohio counties of Cuyahoga and Summit.

It was not immediately clear whether the federal trial in Cleveland would go forward with the two remaining defendants — distributor Henry Schein and pharmacy chain Walgreens. Lawyers, journalists and spectators packed the courtroom and two overflow rooms, forming lines dozens deep before the courtroom opened at 8 a.m.

The deal was first reported by The Wall Street Journal and was confirmed to The Associated Press by Paul Hanly, a lead lawyer for the local governments suing the drug industry.

The trial was to be a test case for legal issues involved in thousands of lawsuits brought against players in the opioid industry by state and local governments, Native American tribes, hospitals and other entities.

The plaintiffs say distributors failed to uphold a requirement that they stop suspicious orders of controlled substances from being shipped.

Federal data released as part of the litigation shows that 76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills were shipped to U.S. pharmacies from 2006 to 2012, with shipments continuing to grow even after the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration warned the drug industry about the increasing misuse of prescription opioids.

An Associated Press analysis found that in 2012, enough of the powerful and addictive painkillers were shipped for every man, woman and child in the U.S. to have nearly a 20-day supply.

The lawsuits also alleged that drugmakers improperly marketed opioids to prescribers, overselling the benefits and understating the risks of a class of drugs that has been known for centuries to be addictive.

The judge overseeing the federal litigation had long pushed for settlements that would not only provide for damages for the plaintiffs, but also change practices as a way to make a dent in the opioid crisis.

The epidemic has become more complicated in the past decade, with fatal overdose numbers rising largely because of illicit drugs such as heroin and fentanyl. Overall, there have been more than 400,000 deaths linked to opioids in the U.S. since 2000.

The settlement efforts until now have been mixed.

Four drugmakers reached deals only with the two Ohio counties — enough to get them out of the first trial, but leaving unresolved the claims from communities across the country.

OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma reached a tentative settlement last month that could be worth up to $12 billion over time. But half the states and hundreds of local governments oppose it. The company is now going through federal bankruptcy proceedings in White Plains, New York, creating the possibility that its settlement offer could be renegotiated.

 

Spook ball at the Rec Center

The Iola Recreation Department sponsored a Halloween dodgeball tournament on Saturday at the Recreation Building. Left, Brooklyn Holloway holds on to a ball while awaiting the perfect opportunity to throw. Bottom left, Amos Rutoh and Caden Vega converse before the start of a match. Bottom right, Ean DeLaTorre and Brock Michael hydrate in between games of dodgeball. REGISTER/ERICK MITCHELL

LaHarpe cleanup work and play

Wet and dreary weather made way for sunny, but muddy, conditions for a massive Cleanup Day project in LaHarpe Saturday. The effort included volunteer students from Kansas State University and Allen Community College, workers from Nelson Quarries, LaHarpe PRIDE members and other LaHarpe residents.

KSU student Ahmed Badawi enjoys a ride down the LaHarpe City Park zip line at the conclusion of the day?s activities.

 

A group of workers picks up brush from one of 18 yards cleaned up during the day.

 

Several volunteers pose for a photo. PHOTOS BY MARCIA DAVIS AND RICHARD LUKEN 

Chillin’

The Mildred Festival brought a variety of craft vendors, music and a car show to the Mildred Store Saturday and Sunday. Bob and Vanessa Palmer of Kincaid hang out with their dog, Annie Oakley, their 1965 Chevrolet pickup and 1985 Corvette (not pictured) during the car show. REGISTER/VICKIE MOSS

Hamlin wins chaotic cut-off race in Kansas City

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Denny Hamlin was surrounded by Joe Gibbs Racing teammates at the front on the final restart, and that put Chase Elliott in the most difficult and precarious of situations.

Somehow, he figured, he needed to find a way to beat them all to advance in NASCAR’s playoffs.

It turned out second place was good enough.

Hamlin roared away with a push from behind from teammate Kyle Busch on the second shot at a green-white-checkered finish, and Elliott was unable to chase him down. But deep in the field, Brad Keselowski was going backward, and the spots he lost in the elimination race at Kansas Speedway were enough to send Elliott through in the final cut-off spot to the round of eight.

Hamlin won the race. Elliott felt almost as if he did.

“You have to stay fighting in these things, especially with the late-race restarts,” he said. “Just excited we get to fight another race. Back up against the wall, to come out here and battle for the win, that’s what you have to do when you’re in the position we were in.”

In a bit of irony, it was Keselowski who helped bring out the caution in the first overtime when he got into Daniel Suarez and triggered a wreck that collected teammate Joey Logano. The field was nearing the start-finish line but the caution light came on before the leader took the white flag.

If Hamlin had crossed a split-second quicker, the race would have been over and Keselowski safe.

“I pushed as hard as I knew how and didn’t quite do good enough on the last restart and that was it,” Keselowski said. “We clawed as hard as we could and there were times it looked like we were going to be fine and times it didn’t. In the end it didn’t work out.”

Kyle Busch ultimately finished third, followed by Kurt Busch and William Byron. But the key was Keselowski, who dropped from 13th to 19th on the final restart and out of the next round of the playoffs.

He ended up three points — equal to three positions on the track — below the cutoff line.

Byron was the next driver eliminated despite a strong run at Kansas, where he would have needed a win to advance. Alex Bowman and home-state hero Clint Bowyer also were eliminated.

“I did think we were OK,” Keselowski said, “but obviously we weren’t.”

The win was the fifth this season for Hamlin, who already was in good shape to advance but picked up valuable playoff points with the win. He’d finished in the top five at Kansas twice in the past couple years, but the trip to victory lane was the first for his Joe Gibbs Racing team since 2012.

“This was a tough track for us. We didn’t run very good here in the spring,” said his crew chief, Chris Gabehart. “We got a few key adjustments that turned us into a dominant car.”

The frenzied push to the finish Sunday began when Blaney scraped the wall with 14 to go, causing his tire to go down and a caution flag to fly. Elliott was three points behind Keselowski at that point, but the savior of Hendrick Motorsports’ playoff hopes made a big move on the restart to climb to fourth place, and that put the pressure right back on Keselowski to make up ground.

Elliott was still in good shape until another caution flew, jumbling the front of the pack and giving Keselowski a chance. He made a quick stop and picked up three spots on pit road, putting Elliott back in a situation where it appeared he would need a victory to advance.

“I was under the impression,” he said.

The entire field got through the first playoff restart cleanly, but Keselowski ran out of room deep in the pack and nudged Suarez, sending him into the wall. Logano also was heavily damaged in the wreck, throwing his own playoff hopes into question as another OT approached.

Hamlin got a good jump on the restart, and Elliott dived low and got in line. He immediately moved forward into second place while Keselowski began hemorrhaging positions, and the change that was made in the final two laps was enough to send Elliott into the next round.

“If you ever get to Homestead, you’re going to have to fight for a win,” he said. “Proud of the effort. Learned a lot. To be able to come out here and, like I said, in our minds have to win, come and fight for one, to finish second, I think is step in the right direction for us.”

OTHER PLAYOFF DRIVERS

Bowyer had a strong finish in eighth, but the playoff contender was a non-factor most of the day despite needing a win to advance. Kevin Harvick started 40th after inspection issues and never making it on the track to qualify, but he worked his way through the field to finish ninth.

“That was not a very good weekend from top to bottom,” Harvick said. “I just didn’t have a very good car and didn’t have a very good day on pit road. Nothing went right all weekend. It was definitely one of the worst weekends we have had in a while.”

ALL THE REST

Among non-playoff drivers, Erik Jones was among his three Gibbs playoff teammates in contention for the win before finishing seventh. Jimmie Johnson rallied from a slow start to finish 10th.

UP NEXT

Keselowski won the spring race at Martinsville, though that probably doesn’t make him feel much better returning now that he’s outside the playoffs. Logano edged Hamlin in the playoff race a year ago.

Mulvaney’s ‘quid pro quo’ comments still drawing fire

WASHINGTON (AP) — For Mick Mulvaney, the hits just keep on coming.

First, President Donald Trump’s acting chief of staff stirred up a tempest by acknowledging that the administration had held up aid to Ukraine in part to prod that country to investigate Democrats and the 2016 elections. Then Mulvaney went on television Sunday to defend his boss in effusive terms — and ended up making a new problematic comment.

Explaining why Trump had tried to steer an international summit to one of the president’s own properties before giving up on the idea, Mulvaney said Trump “still considers himself to be in the hospitality business.” That did nothing to allay concerns that the president has used his office to enrich his business interests.

The bookended performances over the span of a few days were panned by the president’s allies and cast doubt on Mulvaney’s job security at the White House.

Mulvaney denied on “Fox News Sunday” that there was any consideration of his resignation, “Absolutely, positively not.”

At a press conference Thursday, Mulvaney tried to put a positive spin on Trump’s selection of his Doral, Florida, golf resort to host next year’s Group of Seven world summit. It was also an opportunity for Mulvaney demonstrate his ability to defend the president.

He struggled, in the process offering fresh fodder to critics of a president already besieged by an impeachment inquiry.

Mulvaney asserted in the briefing that military aid to Ukraine was delayed partly because Trump wanted officials there to look into a security company hired by the Democratic National Committee that discovered that Russian agents had broken into the committee’s network in 2016.

“The look back to what happened in 2016 certainly was part of the thing that he was worried about in corruption with that nation,” Mulvaney told reporters. “Did he also mention to me in the past the corruption that related to the DNC server? Absolutely, no question about that.” Mulvaney continued: “That’s why we held up the money.” Trump’s personal lawyers quickly dissociated themselves from the chief of staff’s comments.

Mulvaney’s description of the administration’s handling of the Ukraine aid amounted to a quid pro quo, though he later claimed his comments had been misconstrued.

“That’s not what I said,” Mulvaney told “Fox News Sunday” as host Chris Wallace repeatedly confronted him with his own comments. “That’s what people said that I said.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo refused to defend the comments in an interview Sunday with ABC’s “This Week.”

“I will leave to the chief of staff to explain what it is he said and what he intended,” Pompeo said.

Mulvaney is not aware of any effort to replace him, according to a person close to him who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal conversations. The president has also expressed his support for Mulvaney to the acting chief of staff’s team, the person said. Press secretary Stephanie Grisham said Sunday afternoon that Mulvaney still has the confidence of the president.

The news conference on Thursday left aides in the West Wing dumbfounded at the former South Carolina congressman’s performance and some quarters of Trump’s orbit — the Justice Department and Trump’s personal attorney, among them — dissociating themselves from his account. The president himself, already angry that Republicans were not defending him on Syria and Doral, was also displeased that Mulvaney only made the headlines worse, according to three White House officials and Republicans close to the White House not authorized to speak publicly about private conversations.

Still, a swift dismissal doesn’t appear on the horizon, according to nine staffers and outside advisers, who noted the difficulties Trump has faced attracting and retaining high quality White House staff even before the impeachment episode. The shortage of viable replacements has kept other officials in their posts months after he soured on them.

Even before Democrats launched the impeachment inquiry, Mulvaney was on thin ice, with diminished status in the White House. Holding the job of acting chief of staff since January, Mulvaney has frustrated aides who saw him as less willing than his predecessors to challenge the president.

Once Democrats began investigations meant to remove Trump from office, Mulvaney drew the brunt of criticism from presidential allies who felt the White House wasn’t prepared to fight back forcefully.

He has also clashed with White House counsel Pat Cipollone, sometimes mentioned as a potential Mulvaney successor, over strategy and tactics in response to impeachment. Mulvaney has complained that he had been iced out of the process, which the lawyer was treating as a legal, not political, matter.

Trump’s decision late Saturday to reverse course on his much-criticized plan to host the G-7 at Doral was the latest move that called into question Mulvaney’s job security.

Mulvaney had insisted that White House staff concluded that Doral was “far and away the best physical facility” and tried to push back at concerns raised by Democrats and some Republicans that Trump was using the presidency to enrich himself.

Mulvaney said Sunday that Trump was “honestly surprised at the level of pushback” on his choice of Doral.

That notion struck some Trump allies as hollow, because the uproar was resounding in August when the president first floated the idea of choosing Doral. They argued that the president’s aides, Mulvaney first among them, either should have persuaded him not to hold it there or devised a better communications strategy.

“Could we have put on an excellent G-7 at Doral? Absolutely,” Mulvaney concluded on Fox. “Will we end up putting on an excellent G-7 someplace else? Yes we will.”

Iola Recreation flag football box score

Tuesday’s Results

1st-2nd grade division

 

A&W Restaurant 19

Piqua State Bank 24

TDs for A&W: Ty Thomas, 1 TD; Corbyn Larios, 1 TD; Remington Hall, 1 TD. TDs for Piqua: Jaxen Mueller, 2 TDs; Cade Curry 2 TDs. 

 

C.L.O. 0

Iola Pharmacy 18

TDs for Pharmacy: Milo Franklin, 2 TDs; Brier Valentine 1 TD. 

 

Thursday’s Results

Iola Pharmacy 18

Piqua State Bank 14

TDs for Pharmacy: Milo Franklin 3 TDs. TDs for Piqua: Lee Wanker, 1 TD; Jaxen Mueller, 1 TD.

 

C.L.O. 0

A&W Restaurant 20

TDs for A&W: Landon Desmarteau, 1 TD; Ty Thomas, 1 TD; Ron Ballard, 1 TD. 

 

Tuesday’s Results

3rd-5th grade division

 

Shaughnessy Const. 20

Iola Register 12

TDs for Shaughnessy: Lukey Boeken, 1 TD; Evan Boeken, 2 TDs. TDs for Register: Grady Martin, 2 TDs. 

 

Iola Register 12

Hammerson Ready Mix 40

TDs for Register: Brayden Griffeth, 1 TD; Grady Martin, 1 TD. TDs for Hammerson: Corbin Bowers, 4 TDs; Noah Anderson, 2 TDs. 

 

Hammerson Ready Mix 30

Shaughnessy Const. 14

TDs for Hammerson: Corbin Bowers, 2 TDs; Noah Anderson, 2 TDs. TDs for Shaughnessy: Evan Boeken, 2 TDs. 

 

Thursday’s Results

 

Hammerson Ready Mix 18

Iola Register 6

TDs for Hammerson: Corbin Bowers, 1 TD; Noah Anderson, 1 TD; Zoie Hesse, 1 TD. TDs for Register: Brayden Griffeth. 

 

Nelson Quarries 6

Iola Insurance 12

TDs for Nelson: Reed Clift, 1 TD. TDs for Insurance: Eli Dunne, 1 TD; Joshua Wanker, 1 TD. 

 

Shaughnessy Const. 6

Nelson Quarries 37

TDs for Shaughnessy: Colton Thompson, 1 TD. TDs for Nelson: Ty Shaughnessy, 1 TD; Reed Clift, 4 TDs.  

Engagement: Carroll—Pener

Gary and Victoria Pener of Kansas City are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Jordan Lee Pener, to Richard Joseph Carroll, son of Maureen Ann Percy Carroll of Lenexa and Michael F. Carroll of Lake Jocomo in Kansas City.

Rick is also the grandson of Jeanne Ann Masterson Percy of Iola and the late William Glenn Percy, and of Mike and Mary Jo VanWalleghem of Kansas City and the late Joseph E. Carroll.

Jordan is a 2010 graduate of Blue Valley Northwest High School. She graduated from the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2014 where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. She was awarded a master’s degree in counseling psychology in 2016 from the University of Kansas. She works as a therapist at Kids TLC.

Rick is a 2007 graduate of Shawnee Mission West High School in Overland Park, where he lettered in football and baseball. He attended Neosho Community College and Pittsburg State University on baseball scholarships and was a pitcher for the NCC Panthers and the PSU Gorillas baseball teams. He graduated from Pittsburg State University in 2012 with a degree in graphics design. Rick is an architect at Cresh.

The couple resides in Lenexa.

Their wedding will be at 4:30 in the afternoon on Nov. 8, 2019, at the 1890 KC Event Space in Platte City, Mo., with a reception, dinner and dance to follow at the wedding venue.

Engagement: Dye—Carroll

Maureen Ann Percy Carroll of Lenexa and Michael F. Carroll of Lake Jacomo in Kansas City are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Megan Maureen “Meggie” Carroll to Colby Dye, the son of Jan and David Bryan Dye, M.D., of Pryor, Okla.

Meggie is also the granddaughter of Jeanne Ann Masterson Percy of Iola, and the late William Glenn Percy, and of Mike and Mary Jo VanWalleghem of Kansas City and the late Joseph E. Carroll.

Meggie is a 2010 graduate of Saint Thomas Aquinas High School in Lenexa where she was involved in vocal music and was captain of the cheer squad. She is a 2014 graduate of the University of Oklahoma where she was captain of the OU Sooners Pom Dance Team and was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. She was awarded a master’s degree from the University of Kansas in 2017.

Currently, Meggie is a four-year veteran Kansas City Chiefs Cheerleader for the NFL, is a legislative intern at the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, and is an instructor, choreographer and competition dance team coach at LEDance Studio in Lenexa.

Colby is a 2009 graduate of Bishop McGuinness High School in Oklahoma where he also played baseball. He is a graduate of Oklahoma University and was awarded a master’s degree in 2016 from the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and works in hospital administration.

The couple resides in Lenexa.

Their wedding will be at 1:30 in the afternoon on Feb. 15, 2020, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church in Kansas City, Mo., with a reception, dinner and dance to follow at the Power and Light Grand Hall in Kansas City, Mo.