K-State students earn degrees

MANHATTAN — Three area students earned degrees, one with honors, following Kansas State University’s summer 2018 session.
Emily Frank, Colony, graduated cum laude with a bachelor of science degree in business administration. Students who maintain a grade-point average of at least 3.75 earn the cum laude status.
Also earning degrees were Taylor Swanson-Lhuillier, Moran, with a bachelor of science in business administration degree; and Katelyn Meiwes with a masters degree in science.

 

Data: Many KU students graduate in six years

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Only 42 percent of University of Kansas students graduated within four years, according to a recent review of graduation data.
The university’s graduation rate grew to 63 percent when tacking on two additional years, the Lawrence Journal-World reported. After spending six years at the University of Kansas, 37 percent of students still haven’t graduated.
“Students may study overseas, or they may change a major or decide on a double major. There are many nuances that affect the numbers,” said DeAngela Burns-Wallace, the university’s vice provost for undergraduate studies.
Each additional year of study costs about $21,500 based on in-state tuition and room and board rates at the Lawrence campus. Figures show that out-of-state students usually have to pay about $38,000 each additional year.
“I have a four-year, out-of-state scholarship, which will expire. I can’t afford not to graduate,” said Sarah Cluff, a senior earning a dual degree in biosciences and German studies.
Burns-Wallace said university officials are trying to improve graduation rates by providing access to mentors, peer advisers and other resources, such as tutoring.
University officials aim to achieve a 70 percent graduation rate, she said.
“We are not there, but we are still trending upward,” Burns-Wallace said. “We have wonderful people and amazing students, and we need to make sure they are connected and leveraged in the right way.”

GOP group drops support for Yoder

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The House Republican campaign committee has dropped its support for an incumbent congressman facing a difficult re-election in a suburban Kansas City district that Hillary Clinton won.
The National Republican Congressional Committee cancelled $1.2 million in ad spending that would have backed Kansas Rep. Kevin Yoder, spokesman Jesse Hunt confirmed Monday.
It’s just the latest indicator that Republicans are facing a hostile electoral climate in areas where candidates like Yoder, who is endorsed by President Donald Trump, had previously performed well. The Congressional Leadership Fund, the principal super PAC supporting GOP House candidates, announced last week that it was withdrawing support for two other embattled incumbents in suburbs districts near Denver and Detroit.
Yoder’s race is the second the NRCC has dropped. It comes as Republicans are deciding where best to direct resources to help their candidates stave off energized Democrats in about 25 districts where Hillary Clinton won and the GOP is seen as highly vulnerable.
In 2016, Clinton beat Trump by a little over 1 percentage point in Yoder’s district, which encompasses affluent, fast-growing suburbs as well as some poorer Kansas City neighborhoods.
In a statement, Yoder spokesman C.J. Grover insisted that the NRCC “remains engaged in our race” and has committed to “helping Kevin directly.” He did not elaborate.
Yoder’s opponent, Sharice Davids, has gained national attention for her nontraditional profile as an LGBT Native American attorney who is also a former mixed-martial arts fighter.
Davids had a modest lead in a recent New York Times poll and was endorsed by former President Barack Obama on Monday. Obama included Davids on a tweeted list of more than 250 candidates he endorsed across the nation.
The ex-president, a Democrat, tweeted that he was endorsing candidates running “to expand opportunity for all of us and to restore dignity, honor and compassion to public service.”
The move by the NRCC also shows that a Democrat like Davids, who has run on a progressive platform, can perform well even in Republican-dominated states like Kansas.
After Davids won her primary, Republicans scoffed that she was an “extreme” liberal and predicted she would vote in lockstep with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi.
Through early August, Yoder had raised nearly $2.9 million for his re-election, seven times as much as the $403,000 Davids raised.

Wichita debates plan for stray, feral cats

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A proposed ordinance in Wichita would create “cat colonies” for stray and feral cats where they could live after being trapped, sterilized, vaccinated and released.
Wichita’s animal advisory board considered the proposal Wednesday to encourage residents to trap the cats they find on their property and turn them over to become “community cats.”
Under the resolution, the cats would be identified by “ear tipping,” having a notch cut in their ear, and would be exempt from capture and euthanasia at the city animal shelter unless they bite someone or otherwise cause a public nuisance, The Wichita Eagle reported.
Residents could feed and provide water for the cats without being subject to violating city regulations or animal-cruelty laws that apply to household pets.
The board was advised by lawyer Katie Barnett, representing the Best Friends Animal Society, who said she’s helped to set up similar ordinances in Kansas City, Kansas, Lawrence, Shawnee and other communities.
One opponent, Michael Nolan of Wichita, criticized the proposal and the board for discussing protecting the cats without considering the impact on other wildlife.
He said he found it ridiculous that the city board wants to make accommodation for “unwanted cats from irresponsible cat owners.”
“Feral cats need to be removed from the environment, removed, not coddled, not put up in colonies,” Nolan said. “The amphibians, the snakes, the birds, everything they can get they will kill. It’s what they do.”
Judy Handley, a leader of the Friends of Felines and former member of the city board, responded that trap, neuter and release reduces the stray population, but is more humane than capturing the cats and killing them.
“Trap and euthanasia has not worked because you get people who are cat lovers hiding their cats so you don’t find them,” she said.
She also said the proposed ordinance was studied for three years and “nothing else works.”
The City Council would have to approve the ordinance before it could take effect.

Midwest economy strong but trade worries linger

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The economy remains strong in nine Midwest and Plains states, but business leaders are concerned about the ongoing trade disputes, according to a new monthly survey released Monday.
The overall economic index for the region slipped to 57.5 in September from August’s 61.1, but it remained in positive territory.
Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, said he expects business will slow but continue growing in the next few months because of the trade concerns and rising interest rates.
“I expect expanding tariffs, trade restrictions, and rising short-term interest rates from a more aggressive Federal Reserve, to slow regional growth to a more modest but still positive pace in the months ahead,” Goss said.
The survey results are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Any score above 50 suggests growth, while a score below that suggests decline.
The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.
Even with the trade tensions, Goss said business leaders remain fairly optimistic because profits have been strong. The survey’s confidence index jumped to 68 in September from August’s 60.8.
Business costs continue to increase. The survey’s inflation index remained high at 76.1 in September even though it declined slightly from August’s 80.5.
The survey showed strong trading numbers, but Goss said that might be the result of some businesses buying in advance of new tariffs and trade restrictions.
The export index grew to 53.1 in September from August’s 51.8. The import index decreased slightly to 57.2 from August’s 58.1.

Letter to the editor — October 2, 2018

Dear editor,
The Farm City Days Committee has denied Kris Kobach’s request to be in their parade as long as he is in my Jeep with a replica gun on it, no it’s not even a real gun.

They will allow Kris in my jeep in the parade if I remove the replica gun.

So what this becomes is a 2nd Amendment issue.

Kris and myself have done dozens of parades and my estimate is that well over a hundred thousand people, including men, women and children, have given thumbs up, waves, smiles, and cheers. Kids absolutely love it.

I would estimate five hundred, less than a hundred men and not one kid, have turned their backs on us, given thumbs down, given me the finger, or yelled at us.

As Kris and I have noticed, half of these people aren’t protesting the gun, but the bobble head Trump I have as a hood ornament.

I would guess that several thousand people have asked, and been allowed to take pictures with my jeep, including reporters and other media personalities.

It seems a shame that a few people on the FCD’s committee are denying my hometown to see my jeep with its replica gun in Iola’s parade. Not one other town has denied their citizens a chance to make up their own minds whether they like or hate the jeep, the gun, the Trump bobble head, Kris, or even myself.

These eight people have taken it upon themselves to make sure you don’t get to see it in the parade, they deemed the gun inappropriate.

They said “we wouldn’t allow any other group a venue to promote their political positions.” Yet they allow politicians in this parade.

So now we come to the heart of the matter.

It was also said by one of the committeemen, “You should know by now that my dignity and actions are not based on who supports me or my affiliations.” So he pushes his dignity on to you. The truth is he doesn’t like guns or the Second Amendment so therefor nobody else can make up their own minds, they’re doing it for you.

I built this jeep as a statement piece, a bold statement. It states my commitment to stand up for my rights, particularly the Second Amendment, and my freedoms in this country. It’s replica flag wrap states my love for this country.

The FCD’s committee doesn’t see it that way so nobody else should see it.

This my friends is a shame.

Don Erbert,
Iola, Kan.

 

A look back in time

55 Years Ago
October 1963
 The Allen County Health Facilities Planning Council has recommended a new wing be added to Allen County Hospital, increasing bed capacity from 42 to 56. The council also agreed with conclusions reached in a six-month study directed by the Kansas Health Facilities Information Service.
*****
A new rock crusher, costing $62,500, has arrived for Allen County in Chanute and will be first located at the quarry on the Elder Thomas farm seven miles south of the drive-in theater, Charles Burrows, chairman of the board of county commissioners, said today.
*****
WICHITA (AP) — Dr. Thurlow W. Leiurance, musical composer and dean emeritus of the University of Wichita school of music, died Wednesday at Boulder, Colo. He was 85. Mr. Lieurance was born in Oskaloosa, Iowa, but received his high school education in Neosho Falls. He attained national fame for his composition, “By the Waters of Minnetonka,” in 1914. He also wrote a march for the City of Iola. The house his family lived in was pointed out in Neosho Falls to visitors for many years. It was torn down about 15 years ago.
*****
Opposition to a proposed move by the Missouri Pacific Railway Co. that would discontinue freight from Iola eastward through Fort Scott was voiced last night at a meeting in Bronson, Gerald Wright of the Bronson Grain Co. reported. Attending the meeting were representatives of LaHarpe, Moran, Bronson and Uniontown, the four towns between Iola and Fort Scott that would be directly affected by the move.
*****
One of the major problems facing Iola is the loss of population in the age bracket of 15 to 34 and the increase of population in the 65 years and older bracket, according to a comprehensive plan for the city completed recently by Butler and Associates of Springfield, Mo. A population study is only part of the report which also includes a land use plan, a thoroughfare plan, a community facilities plan and a capital improvements program.
*****
Plans were laid last night for a new Iola group that will be organized more formally in the next few days and weeks as the “Mustang Spur Club.” It is a proposed organization for adults to demonstrating moral support for IHS athletic teams. It was decided to order western style hats, light blue or turquoise, for the members to wear at IHS games.

 

Indonesia quake toll still rising

PALU, Indonesia (AP) — The death toll from an earthquake and tsunami that decimated parts of the central Indonesian island of Sulawesi jumped to more than 1,200 today as disaster officials began reaching coastal areas that were cut off by blocked roads and downed telephone lines.
Officials said hundreds of other people were severely injured, and that hundreds of bodies could still be buried under quicksand-like mud caused by Friday’s magnitude 7.5 earthquake.
About 10 nations and the European Union pledged aid after Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo appealed for international help. Little of that, however, has arrived yet in the quake zone, and increasingly desperate residents grabbed food and fuel from damaged stores and begged for help.
Rescuers have focused much of their attention so far on the biggest affected city, Palu, which has 380,000 people and is easier to reach than other hard-hit areas.
“We feel like we are stepchildren here because all the help is going to Palu,” said Mohamad Taufik, 38, from the town of Donggala, who said five of his relatives are still missing.
“There are many young children here who are hungry and sick, but there is no milk or medicine.”
Along the coast, the tsunami, which reportedly reached as high as 6 meters (nearly 20 feet) in some places, shattered buildings, uprooted concrete and thrust houses and boats tens of meters inland.
The death toll for all affected areas reached 1,234, national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in Jakarta, the capital. He said more people remain trapped in Sigi and Balaroa, meaning the toll is likely to rise.
Nugroho said more aid was being distributed, but “we still need more time to take care of all the problems.”
He said 153 bodies were buried Monday in a mass grave and that the operation continued Tuesday.
A special aircraft carrying 12,000 liters (3,170 gallons) of fuel had arrived and trucks with food were on the way with police escorts to guard against looters. Nugroho said many gas stations were inoperable either because of quake damage or from people stealing fuel.
The frustration of waiting for days without help boiled over for some.
“Pay attention to Donggala, Mr. Jokowi. Pay attention to Donggala,” yelled one resident in a video broadcast on local television, referring to the president. “There are still a lot of unattended villages here.”
The town’s administrative head, Kasman Lassa, all but gave residents permission to take food — but nothing else — from shops.
“Everyone is hungry and they want to eat after several days of not eating,” Lassa said on local TV. “We have anticipated it by providing food, rice, but it was not enough. There are many people here. So, on this issue, we cannot pressure them to hold much longer.”
Desperation was visible in Palu as well. Signs propped along roads read “We Need Food” and “We Need Support,” while children begged for cash in the streets and long lines of cars snarled traffic as people waited for gas.
Teams were searching for trapped survivors under destroyed homes and buildings, including a collapsed eight-story hotel in Palu, but they needed more heavy equipment to clear the rubble. Nearly 62,000 people have been displaced from their homes, Nugroho said.
Many people were believed trapped under shattered houses in the Palu neighborhood of Balaroa, where the earthquake caused the ground to heave up and down violently.
“I and about 50 other people in Balaroa were able to save ourselves by riding on a mound of soil which was getting higher and higher,” resident Siti Hajat told MetroTV, adding that her house was destroyed.
In Palu’s Petobo neighborhood, the quake caused loose, wet soil to liquefy, creating a thick, heavy quicksand-type material that resulted in massive damage. Hundreds of victims are still believed to be buried in the mud there.
Liquefaction of soil can be compared to walking on a sandy beach.
“If you walk across some wet sand a little back from the water’s edge, it is usually firm walking, even though you might leave footprints,” said Adam Switzer, an expert at the Earth Observatory of Singapore. “However, if you stand still and wiggle your toes and feet, you will probably sink a little as the sand around your feet becomes soft and unstable. This is similar to what happens during liquefaction.”
Nugroho said generators, heavy equipment and tents are among the most-needed aid items. The countries that offered assistance include the United States and China, he said.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Tuesday that his government has given $360,000 to help victims and is in talks with Indonesian authorities about a second round of aid. The initial funds are to go to the Indonesian Red Cross for the most obvious emergency aid needs, such as tarpaulins.
Nugroho said only two of the 122 foreigners in the area remained unaccounted for — one from South Korea and the other from Belgium.
The coastline at Palu was strewn with rubble and a few brightly colored cargo containers poking out of the water. Buildings near the water were ruined shells. The arches of a large yellow bridge rested in the water and eerie drone video showed a Ferris wheel, untouched, on a beach scraped bare by the waves.
In Petobo, Edi Setiawan said he and his neighbors rescued children and adults, including a pregnant woman. His sister and father, however, did not survive.
“My sister was found embracing her father,” he said. “My mother was able to survive after struggling against the mud and being rescued by villagers.”
Indonesia is frequently struck by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis because of its location on the “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin. A powerful quake on the island of Lombok killed 505 people in August, and two moderate quakes near an eastern island on Tuesday reportedly damaged a bridge.
The vast archipelago is home to 260 million people on more than 17,000 islands that stretch a distance similar to that between New York and London. Roads and infrastructure are poor in many areas, making access difficult in the best of conditions.

Canada added to trade pact

TORONTO (AP) — Canada was back in a revamped North American free trade deal with the United States and Mexico late Sunday after weeks of bitter, high-pressure negotiations that brushed up against a midnight deadline.
In a joint statement, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said the agreement “will strengthen the middle class, and create good, well-paying jobs and new opportunities for the nearly half billion people who call North America home.”
The new deal, reached just before a midnight deadline imposed by the U.S., will be called the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA. It replaces the 24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement, which President Donald Trump had called a job-killing disaster.
The agreement reached Sunday gives U.S. farmers greater access to the Canadian dairy market. But it keeps a NAFTA dispute-resolution process that the U.S. wanted to jettison and offers Canada protection if Trump goes ahead with plans to impose tariffs on cars, trucks and auto parts imported into the United States.
“It’s a good day for Canada,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said as he left his office. Trudeau said he would have more to say Monday.
“We celebrate a trilateral deal. The door closes on trade fragmentation in the region,” Jesus Seade, trade negotiator for Mexico’s incoming president, said via Twitter.
Representatives for the government of Mexican president-elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador have called a press conference to discuss details of the trade deal on Monday.
Canada, the United States’ No. 2 trading partner, was left out when the U.S. and Mexico reached an agreement last month to revamp the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The Trump administration officially notified Congress of the U.S.-Mexico trade agreement on Aug. 31. That started a 90-day clock that would let outgoing Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto sign the new pact before he leaves office Dec. 1.
Trump threatened to go ahead with a revamped NAFTA — with or without Canada. It was unclear, however, whether Trump had authority from Congress to pursue a revamped NAFTA with only Mexico.
Some lawmakers immediately expressed relief that Canada had been reinstated in the regional trading bloc. “I am pleased that the Trump administration was able to strike a deal to modernize NAFTA with both Mexico and Canada,” said Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. “NAFTA is a proven success.”
NAFTA tore down most trade barriers between the United States, Canada and Mexico, leading to a surge in trade between the three countries. But Trump and other critics said it encouraged manufacturers to move south of the border to take advantage of low-wage Mexican wages, costing American jobs.
Trump campaigned on a promise to rewrite NAFTA — or get rid of it. Talks on a rewrite began more than a year ago. To placate Trump, Mexico agreed in August to provisions that would require 40 percent to 45 percent of a car be built in countries where auto workers earn at least $16 an hour to qualify for NAFTA’s duty-free benefits.
It was surprising that the United States found it easier to cut a deal with Mexico than with Canada, a longtime ally with a high-wage economy similar to America’s. “When this got started, Canada was the teacher’s pet and Mexico was the problem child,” said Michael Camunez, president of Monarch Global Strategies and former U.S. Commerce Department official.
But relations between Ottawa and Washington soured. In the aftermath of a disastrous G-7 summit in Quebec in June, Trump called Trudeau “weak” and “dishonest.”
The two countries need each other economically. Canada is by far the No. 1 destination for U.S. exports, and the U.S. market accounts for 75 percent of what Canada sells abroad.

Daughter of retired Army officer faces deportation

LANSING, Kan. (AP) — The adopted daughter of a retired Army officer living in Lansing may soon be sent back to South Korea.
The Kansas City Star reports that on Friday, a federal judge in Kansas ruled in favor of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which seeks to deport Hyebin Schreiber, the legally adopted daughter of retired Lt. Col. Patrick Schreiber.
Schreiber sued after immigration authorities rejected visa and citizenship applications for Hyebin. The woman had been Schreiber’s niece when he and his wife legally brought the then-15-year-old girl to the U.S. in 2012.
Schreiber’s deployment the following year to Afghanistan and bad legal advice led the couple to put off her legal adoption until she was 17.
But under immigration law, foreign-born children must be adopted before reaching 16 to derive citizenship from their American parents.
On Friday, U.S. District Judge Daniel D. Crabtree of the District of Kansas concluded that “the (immigration law) in question is not ambiguous.”
In a March interview with the Star, the father blamed himself for not fully researching rules on adopting immigrants. He and and his wife, Soo Jin Schreiber, pledged to return with their daughter to South Korea, if need be, to keep the family intact.
In 2013, Patrick Schreiber was deployed to Afghanistan as a chief intelligence officer , one of six tours in a 27-year military career. He stayed there through much of 2014.
Looking back, he regretted not pursuing the adoption before time ran out. “I should have put my family ahead of the Army,” he said.
Schreiber’s attorney, Rekha Sharma-Crawford, wrote, “Lt. Col. Schreiber is Hyebin’s father. No one … controverts this simple fact.
“Nevertheless, the Agency wants this father to accept that the country he loves and serves has no room in its laws to protect his family.”
The couple, both of Korean descent, met in 1995 when Patrick Schreiber, a U.S. citizen, was stationed in South Korea. Soo Jin obtained permanent U.S. resident status after their marriage.
The adoption in late 2014 breezed past Kansas legal requirements. The state issued a birth certificate naming Patrick as Hyebin’s father and Soo Jin as her mother.  
While Hyebin’s case wound through the legal system, she maintained her resident status by attending the University of Kansas on an F-1 student visa. Today she is a senior, majoring in science.
Her only hope of remaining in the U.S. is if her science studies could attract employers willing to sponsor her in obtaining a work visa. That would allow Hyebin to stay, at least temporarily, in the U.S. after graduating.