Boat crash toll rises

BRANSON, Mo. (AP) — Divers found four more bodies Friday in a Missouri lake where a duck boat packed with tourists capsized and sank in high winds, bringing the death toll to 17 in the country-and-western town of Branson, authorities said.

Investigators blamed stormy weather for the accident Thursday evening on Table Rock Lake. Winds at the time were blowing as hard as 65 mph (105 kph), according to the National Weather Service.

The boat was carrying 29 passengers and two crew members on a pleasure cruise, and authorities said everyone aboard had been accounted for. Seven of the 14 survivors were hurt when the vessel went down. At least two were hospitalized in critical condition, officials said.

The crew member who was operating the boat died, but the captain survived, authorities said.

Named for their ability to travel on land and in water, duck boats have been involved in other serious accidents in the past, including the deaths of more than 40 people since 1999.

Five college students were killed in 2015 in Seattle when a duck boat collided with a bus. Thirteen people died in 1999 when a boat sank near Hot Springs, Arkansas.

“Duck boats are death traps,” said Andrew Duffy, an attorney whose Philadelphia law firm handled litigation related to two fatal duck boat accidents there. “They’re not fit for water or land because they are half car and half boat.”

Safety advocates have sought improvements and complained that too many agencies regulate the boats with varying safety requirements.

The boats were originally designed for the military, specifically to transport troops and supplies in World War II. They were later modified for use as sightseeing vehicles.

Passengers on a nearby boat described the chaos on the lake as the winds picked up and the water turned rough.

“Debris was flying everywhere,” Allison Lester said in an interview Friday with ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Lester’s boyfriend, Trent Behr, said they saw a woman in the water and helped to pull her into the boat. He said he was about to start CPR when an EMT arrived and took over.

The Coast Guard and the National Transportation Safety Board were to investigate. Stone County Sheriff Doug Rader urged anyone with video or photos of the accident to contact authorities.

Weather conditions were sure to figure prominently in the investigation. The weather service issued a severe thunderstorm watch around midday Thursday, followed by a warning at 6:32 p.m., about 40 minutes before the boat tipped over. Both the watch and a statement issued at 7:02 p.m. mentioned the risk of 70 mph winds.

“When we issue a warning, it means, take action,” said Kelsey Angle, a weather service meteorologist in Springfield.

Divers located the vessel, which came to rest on its wheels on the lakebed, and authorities planned to recover it later Friday.

The boat sank in 40 feet of water and then rolled on its wheels into a deeper area with 80 feet of water. Investigators had no information about whether passengers were wearing life jackets or whether they were stowed onboard, the sheriff said.

An off-duty deputy working security for the boat company helped rescue people after the boat turned over, the sheriff said. Dive teams from several law enforcement agencies assisted in the effort.

Suzanne Smagala with Ripley Entertainment, which owns Ride the Ducks in Branson, said the company was assisting authorities. She said this was the ride’s only accident in more than 40 years of operation.

Weather can change rapidly in this part of the country, moving from sunshine and calm to dangerous storms within minutes, said Jason Schaumann, another weather service meteorologist.

“Tornado warnings get a lot of publicity, and severe thunderstorm warnings should be taken very seriously too, particularly if you are in a vulnerable area like a lake or campground,” he said.

 

Kisner tied for lead at Carnoustie

CARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP) — Kevin Kisner hit his approach shot into the Barry Burn at No. 18 and made double-bogey 6, dropping the American into a share of the lead on 6 under at the British Open.

Kisner shot 1-under 70 to follow his opening round of 66, which gave him the overnight lead. He was tied in the clubhouse with Zach Johnson.

Another American, Pat Perez, was out on the course on the same score after birdies on four of his first 14 holes.

After rain in the morning, there are now blue skies and barely any wind for the late starters in the second round at Carnoustie.

3 THINGS TO WATCH

1. Unbelievable stat

When you think powerhouse NASCAR team, you don’t go much further than Hendrick Motorsports, long considered the New York Yankees of stock-car racing. Well, even the Yankees have down years, and Hendrick is in a slump. If Rick Hendrick’s team doesn’t win at New Hampshire, then Hendrick Motorsports will have cycled through 12 months with no wins. Its last win was July 23, 2017. Yikes!

2. More Hendrick

With seven more regular-season races before the playoffs, two Hendrick Motorsports drivers are precariously close to the cut line. Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman are 15th and 16th in the playoff rankings. The top 16 drivers go into the playoffs. William Byron is 22nd in points while Jimmie Johnson, a seven-time Cup champion, is hanging on in 14th place. A couple of wins by underdog drivers could spell disaster.

3. It ain’t over

The feud that started in Daytona between Kyle Busch and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is not over. Busch complained that Stenhouse didn’t apologize after crashing him at Daytona. The two had a verbal exchange at Kentucky while Busch was strapped into his No. 18 Toyota waiting to qualify. “I told him why I didn’t reach out,” Stenhouse said to NBC. “I felt like he ran his mouth enough that I didn’t have anything to say to him.”

— Godwin Kelly, godwin.kelly@news-jrnl.com

New plates delayed

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas officials have delayed the launch date for its new vehicle plates.

State officials said Friday that the original Aug. 1 launch date for the license plates has been delayed until Aug. 15 due to issues in the new digital processing equipment.

Wichita’s Center Industries will create the plates on demand using a digital printer that prints the tag information on a background, then bonds the background material to a metal plate. The plates were previously manufactured in bulk at a plant.

Johnson County is concerned the new system will confuse people because it involves a new delivery method. The new plates will be mailed to the customer’s home within 10-14 business days.

South Logan FCE meets

Nine South Logan FCE members attended the Wednesday meeting at the Humboldt Public Library.

Deb Smith presented the lesson on ‘The Power of Healthy Foods.”

Members volunteered to help at the Allen County Fair with entries and guarding exhibits. The Fair Booth Committee discussed plans for a “Healthy Cooking Styles booth.”

Mary White was congratulated on being South Logan’s Volunteer of the Year, and was recognized at the Humboldt Chamber of Commerce Banquet.

The community ice cream social will be at 6 p.m. Aug. 17 at the Sharp residence. All FCE members and community residents are invited. Bring ice cream or dessert, table service and lawn chairs.

The next South Logan meeting will be at 1:30 p.m. Sept. 17 at the Humboldt Library.

Spectators become spectacle at Tour de France

BOURG D’OISANS, France (AP) — A spectator threw a smoke bomb into the Tour de France peloton as it passed by on Friday.

Nobody came to any harm. Unlike on Thursday, when a fan’s camera strap appeared to snag Vincenzo Nibali’s handlebars on Alpe d’Huez, he slammed to the ground and broke a vertebra.

The incidents make teams worried fans are getting out of hand on the most famous climbs of the Tour.

“The organizers need to think of something, or put up more fences,” Paolo Slongo, Nibali’s coach with the Bahrain-Merida team, told The Associated Press on Friday. “There is a problem, and it’s getting bigger and bigger. We’ve got to figure out something to resolve it.”

Nibali’s accident occurred in a cloud of yellow smoke set off by spectators, with two police motorbikes not much more than a couple bike lengths in front of the stage leaders.

“The Tour de France was scared that something was going to happen to (Chris) Froome in this last climb and that was the reason they were so close to the riders,” Bahrain-Merida sports director Rik Verbrugghe said. “There are a lot of motor bikes in the race and that’s something maybe we need to think about in the future.”

In the 2016 Tour, Froome had to run up Ventoux when his bike became mangled in a crash that involved two other riders and a police motorbike.

Attitudes toward Froome and his Team Sky soured recently when the four-time Tour champion was involved in an asthma drug case stemming from last year’s Spanish Vuelta — even though he was cleared of wrongdoing just days before the Tour started.

Fans have booed and whistled at Froome throughout the race and with the huge numbers of spectators lining the 21 hairpin bends up Alpe d’Huez, Sky discussed security for Froome on the climb with race organizers.

Still, that didn’t stop one spectator from placing an aggressive hand on Froome’s back in a gesture that the rider did not appreciate.

“Months and months of waiting (for the anti-doping case to end) fueled the suspicion and it took its toll,” said race director Christian Prudhomme, who informed Team Sky that Froome was not welcome at the Tour before he was cleared of doping.

Fans also booed at Geraint Thomas, the Sky rider who became the first cyclist in Tour history to win atop Huez while wearing the yellow jersey.

As a Frenchman, I’m ashamed,” Sky sports director Nicolas Portal said.

Nibali, the 2014 Tour champion, was fourth overall and one of the few riders who appeared capable of challenging Thomas and Froome — who sit 1-2 — for the title.

“He was feeling good yesterday and he was looking for the stage victory,” Slongo said.

Slongo said Nibali will rest for 15 days and look to return for the Spanish Vuelta in August.

Franco Pellizotti, a teammate of Nibali’s and the oldest rider in the Tour at 40, noted that incidents with fans on Alpe d’Huez are nothing new — such as when Giuseppe Guerini rode into a spectator taking a photo in the middle of the road in 1999.

Fans camping out on Huez for weeks before the race create a raucous atmosphere.

“It’s OK to party but you’ve also got to respect the riders,” Pellizotti said. “It’s great for us that all of these fans are there, it really motivates you. But unfortunately sometimes the partying gets excessive and yesterday there were a lot of drunk people.

“It doesn’t take much to make a rider fall.”

More speak out against late OSU team doctor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — More than 100 former students have provided firsthand accounts of sexual misconduct by the now-dead Ohio State University team physician at the center of an ongoing investigation, the university said on Friday.

Over 200 former students and university employees have been confidentially interviewed by independent investigators reviewing allegations against Richard Strauss involving male athletes from 14 sports as well as his work at the student health center and his off-campus medical office, University President Michael Drake said. Those allegations range from 1979 to 1997, during most of Strauss’ two decades on the faculty and medical staff.

“We are grateful to those who have come forward and remain concerned for anyone who may have been affected by his actions,” Drake said.

Ohio State has urged anyone with information to contact the Seattle-based law firm Perkins Coie’s investigators, who are looking into the allegations, what university officials knew and how they responded to any concerns about Strauss. They also are reviewing whether Strauss examined high school students.

Today in history

Today is Saturday, July 21, the 202nd day of 2018. There are 163 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On July 21, 1925, the so-called “Monkey Trial” ended in Dayton, Tennessee, with John T. Scopes found guilty of violating state law for teaching Darwin’s Theory of Evolution. (The conviction was later overturned on a technicality.)

In 1930, President Herbert Hoover signed an executive order establishing the Veterans Administration (later the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs).

In 1949, the U.S. Senate ratified the North Atlantic Treaty.

In 1955, during a summit in Geneva, President Dwight D. Eisenhower presented his “open skies” proposal under which the U.S. and the Soviet Union would trade information on each other’s military facilities and allow aerial reconnaissance. (The Soviets rejected the proposal.)

In 1980, draft registration began in the United States for 19- and 20-year-old men.

In 1999, Navy divers found and recovered the bodies of John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife, Carolyn, and sister-in-law, Lauren Bessette, in the wreckage of Kennedy’s plane in the Atlantic Ocean off Martha’s Vineyard.

A look back in time

20 Years Ago

July 1998

13 — An Iola Area Chamber of Commerce survey of its 222 members found that 26 supported construction of the third phase of the Prairie Spirit Rail Trail from Iola to Welda.

14 — Casiee Michael, senior at Iola High School, recently sang in England and Wales with the Mid-America Festival Choir made up of young singers ages 11 to 18. The Mid-America Festival Choir was sponsored by the American Performing Artists Abroad and directed by Rod Walker, professor of music at Kansas State University in Manhattan.

24 — With the help of two grants from the Attorney General’s office, Hope Unlimited Inc. will be able to enlarge its staff starting next month. Earlier in July, Hope Unlimited was selected as one of 24 organizations in Kansas to receive Protection from Abuse grants for next year.

Quilt guild to meet in Humboldt

HUMBOLDT — The Sunflower Quilter’s Guild will meet Monday at the Humboldt United Methodist Church, Fellowship Hall, 806 N. Ninth St.

The board meeting begins at 9:30 a.m.; the guild meeting at 10 o’clock.

The July program is a mini Shop Hop.