Athletes earn all-state honors from Sports in Kansas

Online sports magazine Sports In Kansas released its all-state basketball selections this week and while only two area athletes made either the first or second team, a multitude of others earned honorable mention selection. 

Yates Center senior Aaron King came away with first-team honors in Class 2A. King averaged 22.6 points and 12.6 rebounds last season while also recording 2.6 blocks and two steals. 

Senior Wildcat guard Hadley Splechter earned honorable mention honors along with junior point guard Jaylee Catron on the girls’ side. 

Making the second team in class 2A was Humboldt senior Bo Bigelow. 

Bigelow averaged 16.7 points and 3.1 rebounds this season after having to sit out last year with an injury. 

Junior Conor Haviland earned honorable mention for the Cubs along with senior Aricah McCall for the Lady Cubs.

The Iola boys came away big with honorable mentions for senior Derek Bycroft and junior Cal Leonard. 

Senior Madisyn Holloway made the 4A girls honorable mention list as well. 

The Crest Lancers netted honorable mentions for both senior Hayden Hermreck and junior Zach Beckmon while senior Lady Lancer Regan Godderz made the list as well in class 1A. 

Southern Coffey County seniors Kolgan Ohl and Dawson Leimkuhler earned honorable mention for the Titan boys while junior Lady Titan Reed Szambecki earned her first all-state honor of her career. 

Briefs: Embiid, 76ers top Celtics for 6th straight victory

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Joel Embiid had 37 points, 22 rebounds and a key block on Kyrie Irving with 35 seconds remaining, and Jimmy Butler scored 15 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter to lead the 76ers over the Boston Celtics for their sixth straight victory.

Tobias Harris added 21 points for the 76ers, who avoided a season sweep by the Celtics. Philadelphia (47-25) holds the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference playoff race, three games ahead of idle Indiana and four in front of fifth-place Boston.

Irving scored 36 points for the Celtics.

The game was tied at 113 with a minute left before Ben Simmons converted a three-point play. He banked in a shot with his right hand and got fouled by Marcus Morris, hitting the free throw to make it 116-113 with 40.8 seconds to go. Embiid then rejected a driving Irving on the Celtics’ ensuing possession and Butler sealed it with a long jumper from the wing with 4.7 ticks remaining.

GRIZZLIES 126, ROCKETS 125, OT

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — James Harden scored 57 points but the Memphis Grizzlies outlasted Houston, handing the Rockets only their second loss in the last 14 games.

Mike Conley scored 35 points for Memphis and Jonas Valanciunas had a career-best 33, including the game-winning free throw with less than a second left.

Today in history

Today is Thursday, March 21, the 80th day of 2019. 

Today’s Highlight in History:

On March 21, 2006, the social media website Twitter was established with the sending of the first “tweet” by co-founder Jack Dorsey, who wrote: “just setting up my twttr.”

In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany.

In 1935, Persia officially changed its name to Iran.

In 1963, the Alcatraz federal prison island in San Francisco Bay was emptied of its last inmates and closed at the order of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.

In 2007, former Vice President Al Gore made an emotional return to Congress as he pleaded with House and Senate committees to fight global warming; skeptical Republicans questioned the science behind his climate-change documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth.”

Darrel Becker

Darrel Lee Becker, 74, of Alice-ville, passed away unexpectedly at his home on Sunday, March 17, 2019.

He was born at the same farm home on April 6, 1944, the son of Arthur Herbert and Edna Betty (Roscher) Becker. He grew up on the farm, attending St. John Lutheran and Aliceville schools, and graduating from Westphalia High School in 1962. He then attended junior college at Allen County Community College in Iola. 

In 1964, he moved to Topeka, and took a job with Allis Chalmers. On July 21, 1974, he was united in marriage with Connie Sue Hadley at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Topeka. His job as a manufacturing engineer continued as Allis Chalmers merged into Siemens in 1975, and they relocated to Little Rock, Ark. Darrel retired in 2005, proud that he served 41 years with the same company. He was a member of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers. 

After retirement, Darrel returned to Aliceville, where he enjoyed serving his church and community. An early riser, Darrel was in charge of getting the coffee made at Tastove’s Garage or at the Co-op in Westphalia.

Darrel’s family was the most important thing in his life. He kept up with all of his kids and grandkids, and would beam with pride telling of their accomplishments. Darrel never met a stranger, and he never forgot a friend.

He was preceded in death by his parents, a sister Eileen McGhee, and by his brothers Donald, Harold and Steven Becker. 

He is survived by his wife, Connie, of the home; two daughters, Carma Stanley and husband Don of Georgetown, Ky., and Debra Baer and husband Mark, of Little Rock, Ark.; seven grandchildren, Ben Stanley and wife Leslie, Katie Stanley and fiancé Dr. Kevin Ader, Amanda Whipple and husband Matthew, Dr. Stephanie Stanley, Kelsey Parsons and husband Cliff, Kyle Baer and fiancé Abby Gillam, and Karsen Baer; a great-granddaughter, Caroline Marie Parsons; a great-grandson to be born in June, Whitt Adams Stanley; a sister, Janice Kellerman and husband Milo; sister-in-law Mary Becker Ervin and brother-in-law, Richard McGhee; and many other relatives and good friends.

The family will receive friends for visitation from 7 to 8 o’clock on Thursday evening at Jones Funeral Home in Burlington. 

Funeral services will be at 10 a.m. on Friday, at St. John Lutheran Church in Aliceville, with burial following at St. John Lutheran Cemetery.

Memorial contributions to “St. John Lutheran Church” (elevator fund) may be sent in care of Jones Funeral Home, Box 277, Burlington, KS 66839.

 

 

James Rourk  1933-2019

Guitars. George Jones. Donna Rourk. Three things Jim Rourk loved with a passion. And not in that order, because we all know Donna was number one. He loved her Tenderly (their song) for nearly 67 years. He also loved a good garage sale. If a bag of phones was 50 cents, he was going to buy it. Radios, speakers, gadgets, SOLD. Our dad loved the art of the hunt. The bargain hunt.

And how about that Jim Rourk wit. Such hilariousness coming from such a soft-spoken man. He was the Bob Newhart of the Midwest.

Jim was quite well-known for his fantastic head of hair. Wavy and thick. As it turned white, it turned heads.

Fishing and friends and Elsmore Lake and pontooning were all Jim’s faves. And also biscuits and gravy.

Let’s talk sports. KU basketball. KC Royals. KC Chiefs. The trifecta. If you consider Wheel of Fortune a sport, Jim would have been wearing a super bowl ring.

His three amazing, talented, funny, popular, awesome kids (JR, Kevin and Becky) are proud to have called him Dad.

His equally amazing, talented, funny, popular, awesome grandkids (Chad, Kaylee, Heather, Jake) were his pride and joy. And the great great-grandkids, too.

He was equally enamored of all the new babies getting their slobber on him. G-pa loved them all.

Nieces, nephews, neighbors, classmates, fellow musicians, and whoever makes the pork tenders at G&W, all had a special place in Jim Rourk’s heart.

The local bird population enjoyed being fed thousands of pounds of birdseed by Jim (and Donna). Squirrels feared him.

Jim was quite the wife-helper and ran a mean vacuum.

Jim was the original Guitar Man. Self-taught, he played and sang nearly every day. And we loved it.

He was the proud baby brother of two brothers and three sisters and the son of Elzie and Ruby.

A true Irishman, James Robert Rourk, Mom’s husband and our dad was a musical, funny, smart, talented, hard-working, strong, helpful, handy, really good man who was and is loved by many, many lucky people.

A celebration of an awesome life will be held at a later date. You can rest assured country music WILL be involved.

“Walk through this world with me, go where I go. Share all your dreams with me, for I love you so.”

Governor drops nominee over 2017 Twitter posts

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Posts on a Kansas judge’s Twitter feed that included vulgar language and criticism of President Donald Trump prompted Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly to withdraw his nomination Tuesday for the state’s second-highest court and raised concerns about her vetting process.

Labette County District Judge Jeffry Jack also faced questions about whether he should remain on the trial-court bench in southeast Kansas. The Senate’s top leader said the state’s judicial ethics commission should review his conduct, and Kansans for Life, a politically influential anti-abortion group, called on him to resign.

Jack maintained in a statement that his tweets expressed “anti-violence, anti-discrimination and anti-hypocrisy” views and non-partisan personal opinions that do not affect his work on the bench. He declined to comment on the calls for his resignation and a review of his conduct.

Kelly’s withdrawal of Jack’s nomination for the Kansas Court of Appeals came a day after key Republicans said he would not be confirmed by the GOP-dominated state Senate and four days after the governor announced the appointment. Kelly said she did not know about Jack’s tweets beforehand.

The judge’s Twitter page includes tweets and retweets from 2017 with foul language or acronyms, some expressing support for abortion rights and gun control. A September 2017 tweet referred to Trump as “Fruit Loops,” and another said, “I am so embarrassed that he is our President.” The last tweet on his feed was in October 2017.

“Who would ever think that a sitting judge would be participating in this these kinds of communications?” Kelly told The Associated Press. “It never occurred to us.”

Senate President Susan Wagle, a Republican, said the state Commission on Judicial Qualifications should consider whether Jack violated a rule in the state’s code of conduct for judges requiring them to promote public confidence in their impartiality. Wagle said she is “absolutely” considering filing a complaint herself.

The commission can admonish judges that their conduct violated the ethics code and order them to stop. It can also recommend the Kansas Supreme Court consider harsher sanctions, such as a public censure, suspension or removal from the bench. Jack has not been sanctioned since becoming a judge in 2005.

“He uses inappropriate language. He has a political bias expressed on the issue of abortion and on guns,” Wagle told the AP.

The process of filling the appeals court vacancy is getting legally messier, too. The opening was created by the retirement of longtime Judge Patrick McAnany on the day Kelly took office in January.

Kelly said she will name a new nominee, but Wagle argued that the appointment now goes to the Kansas Supreme Court’s chief justice.

A 2013 law says the governor forfeits the appointment power if she fails to nominate someone within 60 days of a vacancy, which was March 15. However, the same law says the governor can pick another nominee if the Senate rejects one.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican, advised them by letter that another nomination should be delayed until the legal question of who makes the appointment is resolved. Otherwise, he said, “a cloud will hang over the head of any new appointee.”

Jack’s nomination was doomed Monday when Wagle announced she would not support his confirmation. She and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Rick Wilborn, also a Republican, called on Jack to withdraw, and even the committee’s top Democrat said he would advise him to drop out.

Jack, who served in the Kansas House as a Republican, criticized Wagle for opposing his confirmation before he even had a hearing. He said his tweets were “nonpartisan” and added that Wagle was upset because he criticized people “in power” that she supports.

He also said he thought his tweets would be viewed only by his roughly 100 followers and did not understand they were accessible to the public.

“My mistake was in a lack of understanding of Twitter,” he said. “I am sorry to Governor Kelly that my ignorance of the mechanisms of Twitter caused her any embarrassment.”

Jack was appointed to the bench in Labette County in 2005 by then-Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. He faces a yes-or-no vote in his judicial district every four years on whether he remains on the bench, and voters retained him in 2008, 2012 and 2016 by an average margin of nearly 70 percent.

He is now registered as an unaffiliated voter, and Kelly said his Twitter feed “doesn’t coincide with the conversations we had with Judge Jack.”

The withdrawal of Jack’s nomination was particularly embarrassing because Kelly took the extra step — not required by law — of appointing a panel of lawyers and non-lawyers to screen applications, interview candidates in public and name three finalists.

“I think her staff let her down,” Wilborn said. “I have grandchildren that could have found that in social media.”

Brexit delay sought

LONDON (AP) — Prime Minister Theresa May formally asked the European Union today to postpone Britain’s departure from the bloc — due in nine days — until June 30. But an exasperated EU said Britain would have to accept either a shorter delay or a much longer one.

In a letter to European Council President Donald Tusk, May said the Brexit process “clearly will not be completed before 29 March, 2019” — the date fixed in law two years ago for Britain’s departure.

She asked for a delay until June 30, and said she wanted to set out her reasons to EU leaders at a summit in Brussels on Thursday.

Opposition politicians, and pro-EU members of May’s Conservative government, had urged a longer extension, saying a delay of just a few months could leave Britain once again facing a cliff-edge “no-deal” Brexit this summer. Withdrawing without a deal could mean huge disruption for businesses and people in the U.K. and the 27 remaining EU countries.

But a long extension would infuriate the pro-Brexit wing of May’s divided party, and would require Britain to participate in May 23-26 elections for the European Parliament.

May said that would be unacceptable.

“As prime minister I am not prepared to delay Brexit any further than June 30,” she said in the House of Commons.

May said a longer delay would result in Parliament spending “endless hours contemplating its navel on Brexit.”

Any delay that required Britain to take part in European parliamentary elections would be a major headache for the bloc. Britain believes it would not have to participate if it got a three-month delay, because the newly elected European parliament is not due to convene until July.

But a leading European Commission official said a June 30 extension would cause “legal uncertainty” for the bloc.

The official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation, said Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker told May in a telephone call that “the withdrawal has to be complete before May 23,” the first day of the European elections.

The alternative would be for Britain to participate in the elections and accept a much longer delay, to the end of 2019 or beyond.

Britain voted in June 2016 to quit the EU, but almost three years later, its politicians are deadlocked over how — and even whether — to leave.

The only thing divided pro-Brexit and pro-EU politicians agree on is that they hate the Brexit deal May has struck with the bloc. Nor were they impressed by her move to delay.

Brexit-backing Conservative lawmaker Peter Bone said delaying Brexit would be “betraying the British people.”

“If you continue to apply for an extension to Article 50 you will be betraying the British people.

Opposition Labour Party lawmaker Angela Eagle said May should “stop banging her head against the brick wall of her defeated deal” and seek cross-party support for a new Brexit strategy.

May’s troubles deepened when the speaker of the House of Commons ruled earlier this week that she can’t ask Parliament to vote on the deal again unless it is substantially changed. That scuttled May’s plan to try a third time this week to get the agreement approved.

May told Tusk that despite the ruling “it remains my intention to bring the deal back to the House.”

If it is approved, she plans to use the extension until June 30 in order for Parliament to pass the necessary legislation for Britain’s departure.

A delay to Britain’s withdrawal requires the approval of all 27 remaining EU countries, who are fed up with British political crisis. Juncker said EU leaders are unlikely to agree to a delay at this week’s summit.

“My impression is … that this week at the European Council there will be no decision, but that we will probably have to meet again next week, because Mrs. May doesn’t have agreement to anything, either in her Cabinet or in Parliament,” Juncker told Germany’s Deutschlandfunk radio.

“As long as we don’t know what Britain could say yes to, we can’t reach a decision.”

Britain’s political chaos has drawn reactions ranging from sympathy to scorn at home and around the world. On its front page Wednesday, the Brexit-backing Daily Mail newspaper bemoaned the time since the referendum as”1,000 lost days.”

From Washington, Donald Trump Jr. said May should have listened to his father, who urged her last year to sue the EU in order to secure better departure terms. The U.S. president has criticized May for not taking his advice.

The president’s multimillionaire son blamed “elites” in London and Brussels for scuttling Brexit. Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Trump Jr. said “democracy in the U.K. is all but dead.”

The gridlock is also causing increasing exasperation among EU leaders.

Juncker said that “in all probability” Britain won’t leave on March 29, but he underlined the EU’s insistence that it will not reopen the painstakingly negotiated withdrawal agreement that British lawmakers have snubbed.

“There will be no renegotiations, no new negotiations and no additional assurances on top of the additional assurances we have already given,” he said.

Juncker said Britain’s Parliament needed to decide whether it would approve the deal that is on the table.

“If that doesn’t happen, and if Great Britain does not leave at the end of March, then we are, I am sorry to say, in the hands of God,” he said. “And I think even God sometimes reaches a limit to his patience.”

Red Devil revelry

A pair of special awards were presented at Saturday’s Allen Community College Red Scholarship Athletic Gala.

The Allen Endowment Association Award of Excellence for Donor support was given to Craig and Georgia Abbott for their support to the Endowment Association, the Athletic Department and Allen Community College as a whole. The Abbotts were pictured with Ron and Kristen Ballard, left, and ACC President John Masterson.

The 2019 Allen Endowment Association Award of Excellence for Support to Allen Athletics went to Walter White, former tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs and and current ambassador to the Chiefs organization. 

Mozambique storm death toll rises

CHIPINGE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Mozambique today began three days of national mourning for more than 200 victims of Cyclone Idai, while the death toll rose over 100 in neighboring Zimbabwe from one of the most destructive storms to strike southern Africa in decades.

Torrential rains are expected to continue into Thursday and floodwaters are still rising, according to aid groups trying to get food, shelter and clothing to desperate survivors. It will be days before Mozambique’s inundated plains drain toward the Indian Ocean.

People have been reported clinging to rooftops and trees since the cyclone roared in over the weekend. The United Nations humanitarian office said the town of Buzi, with about 200,000 people, was at risk of becoming at least partially submerged.

“Floodwaters are predicted to rise significantly in the coming days and 350,000 people are at risk,” the U.N. office said.

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa received a somber welcome in the hard-hit mountain community of Chimanimani near the border with Mozambique. Zimbabwean officials have said about 350 people may have died.

Some bodies from Zimbabwe have been swept down the mountainside into Mozambique. “Some of the peasants in Mozambique were calling some of our people to say, ‘We see bodies, we believe those bodies are coming from Zimbabwe,’” said July Moyo, the minister of local government.

Mozambique’s President Filipe Nyusi said late Tuesday that more than 200 people were confirmed dead there. After flying over the affected region on Monday, he said he expected more than 1,000 deaths.

Aid workers were shocked as they arrived in the Mozambique port city of Beira, estimated to be 90 percent destroyed. The 500,000 residents of the city, which has some neighborhoods that are below sea level, are scrambling for food, fuel and medicine.

“The power of the cyclone is visible everywhere with shipping containers moved like little Lego blocks,” said Marc Nosbach, Mozambique director for the aid group CARE.

International aid has started trickling in.

“Everyone is doubling, tripling, quadrupling whatever they were planning” in terms of aid, said Caroline Haga of the Red Cross in Beira. “It’s much larger than anyone could ever anticipate.”

The United Arab Emirates will provide $4.9 million to Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi, the Emirates News Agency reported, citing the Emirates Red Crescent.

Zimbabwe’s president said a planeload of aid from the UAE was expected to arrive in the capital, Harare, later today.

The chairman of the African Union Commission said it would provide $350,000 in immediate support to the countries.

The European Union has released 3.5 million euros ($3.9 million) in emergency aid, and Britain pledged up to 6 million pounds ($7.9 million). Tanzania’s military has sent 238 tons of food and medicine, and three Indian naval ships have been diverted to Beira to help with evacuations and other efforts.

Sacha Myers of the nonprofit Save the Children described overflowing rivers and dams, and said getting in aid was difficult, with roads and bridges washed away or submerged in the region.

Hunger and illness are growing concerns, with crops destroyed and waterborne diseases likely to spread.

“There are large areas where people are really finding it difficult to find sources of clean water,” said Gert Verdonck, the emergency coordinator with Doctors Without Borders in Beira. He added: “On top of all of that, there’s the issue of how to treat people who fall sick_with so many health centers damaged or destroyed.”

Local athletes earn basketball all-state honors

Multiple area players were picked as All-State basketball selections this week. 

Leading the way is Yates Center senior forward Aaron King who earned first team honors from both the Topeka Capital-Journal and the Wichita Eagle. Sports in Kansas selections were unavailable as of press time. 

King ended his season averaging 22.6 points per game, 12.6 rebounds, 2 steals and 2.6 blocks. 

King led the Wildcats to several league titles throughout his high school career and to the sub-state title game where they fell to Pittsburg-St. Mary?s Colgan. 

Also from Yates Center, Lady Cat junior point guard Jaylee Catron earned honorable mention honors from the Capital-Journal. The YC girls ended their year in the sub-state semi-finals versus Humboldt. 

Iola senior shooting guard Madisyn Holloway was the only Filly or Mustang player to garner all-state recognition. Holloway earned honorable mention honors from both the Capital-Journal and Wichita Eagle. The Fillies ended their year in sub-state versus Eudora.

Humboldt senior guard Bo Bigelow earned honorable mention honors from both papers after sitting out his entire junior season. 

Lady Cub senior Aricah McCall earned honorable mention from the Capital-Journal. The Cub boys  ended their season in the sub-state semifinals versus Yates Center while the girls were knocked out in the championship by Colgan.

Crest senior forward Hayden Hermreck was named honorable mention by both papers while senior Lady Lancer Regan Godderz earned honorable mention status from the Capital-Journal. The Lancer boys ended their season in the regional quarterfinals  versus Southern Coffey County.

Southern Coffey County senior Kolgan Ohl earned honorable mention honors from the Capital-Journal. The Titan boys were knocked out by Olpe in the regional semifinals. 

Be sure to check the Register later this week for more all-state honors.