Forty years ago — December 1978

Forty years ago

December 1978

Gary Cleaver, who lives northwest of Iola, trapped a 26-pound male bobcat earlier this week. Cleaver’s cat is one of several which have been trapped in this area this year.

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Talks between the school boards and citizens groups in the county will be held to see if there is any interest in consolidating districts, it was decided last night at the USD 257 board meeting. The steering committee of the citizens groups studying USD 257 needs appeared before the school board at the board’s request and said they felt the school patrons in Moran and Humboldt should be given a chance to consider forming a single district before one of the districts builds a new high school and the possibility of consolidation fades.

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Iranian students at Allen County Community Junior College joined others across the nation yesterday demonstrating against United States support of the Shah of Iran. Students placed leaflets on car windows at the college and yesterday afternoon demonstrated briefly in downtown Iola, wearing black armbands and handing out leaflets to passersby. Dr. William Spencer, president of the college, said he visited at length with the students and said only two of the 32 Iranians enrolled supported the Shah.

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Gordon Conger of rural Iola was elected to the Kansas Soybean Association Board of Directors at the association’s annual meeting this week in Ottawa.

Cub boys and girls fall in season opener vs Eureka

The Humboldt boys and girls got off to a rough start to open up the 2018-19 season on Friday, both falling to Tri-Valley foe Eureka.

The boys lost 80-73 and the girls lost 55-33. Both teams fall to 0-1 this season.

The Cub boys fell behind early and trailed the Tornadoes 20-13 after the first quarter. Things picked up slightly in the second quarter but they still went into halftime with an eight-point deficit at 39-31.

Eureka came out of the half strong and outscored Humboldt 20-12 in the third quarter to push their lead to 59-43.

With a quarter left to salvage things, the Cubs put out their best offensive effort of the night, outscoring Eureka 31-21 but that wasn’t enough as they still came up seven points short.

Senior Tucker Hurst had a big outing, scoring 28 points on 11-16 shooting.

Senior Caleb Coronado had 10 points, senior Bo Bigelow had nine points, junior Conor Haviland had eight points, senior Teryn Johnson had seven, junior Isiah Coronado had five and senior Kyler Allen had two.

The Lady Cubs got off to a similarly slow start, trailing 16-6 after the first quarter, but a strong second quarter got them within a point at 20-19 at the half.

That closeness would soon disappear after the Lady Tornadoes unleashed a 20-4 third quarter to take a 40-23 lead heading into the final quarter.

Eureka outscored Humboldt 15-10 to close out the game and to push the final deficit to 22.

Senior Maggie Johnson was the lone double-figure scorer for the Lady Cubs with 12 points followed by eight for freshman Madi White, seven for senior Aricah McCall, four for junior Winter Snyder and two for senior Savanna Puckett.

Both teams will host Humboldt’s annual preseason tournament this week starting with a match-up versus Uniontown on Tuesday. The girls will play at 7 p.m. and the boys will follow around 8:30 p.m.

 

U.S., China agreement buys time in trade war

WASHINGTON (AP) — The dinner table diplomacy that Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping of China conducted over the weekend produced something as vague as it was valuable: an agreement to keep talking.

Forged over grilled sirloin at the Group of 20 summit Saturday in Buenos Aires, Argentina, the ceasefire Trump and Xi agreed to Saturday night illustrated that the leaders of the world’s two largest economies can at least find some common ground, however tentative and ill-defined it might be. The truce pulled the United States and China back from an escalating trade war that was threatening world economic growth and had set global investors on edge.

What Trump and Xi achieved was the gift of additional time — 90 days, at least — to try to resolve the thorny and complicated issues that divide them. Most important among them, and perhaps the most intractable, is the U.S. argument that Beijing has deployed predatory tactics in a headlong drive to overtake America’s global supremacy in high technology.

Yet reaching a permanent peace will hardly be easy. The Trump administration asserts, and many experts agree, that China systematically steals trade secrets and forces the U.S. and other foreign countries to hand over sensitive technology as the price of admission to the vast Chinese market.

Washington also regards Beijing’s ambitious long-term development plan, “Made in China 2025,” as a scheme to dominate such fields as robotics and electric vehicles by unfairly subsidizing Chinese companies and discriminating against foreign competitors.

This year, Trump imposed an import tax of 25 percent on $50 billion in products, then hit an additional $200 billion worth of goods with 10 percent tariffs. Those 10 percent tariffs were scheduled to ratchet up to 25 percent on Jan. 1 if the United States and China failed to reach an agreement to at least postpone that move.

In Buenos Aires, they did reach such an accord. Trump agreed to delay the scheduled U.S. tariff increase for 90 days while the two sides negotiate over the administration’s technology-related complaints. In return, China agreed to buy what the White House called a “not yet agreed upon, but very substantial” amount of U.S. products to help narrow America’s gaping trade deficit with China. If the Chinese did eventually increase such purchases, it would be warmly welcomed in the U.S. Farm Belt, where producers of soybeans and other crops have been hurt by Beijing’s retaliatory tariffs.

Trump tweeted late Sunday that “China has agreed to reduce and remove tariffs on cars coming into China from the U.S. Currently the tariff is 40%.” There was no Chinese announcement about possible tariff cuts and the Ministry of Commerce in Beijing didn’t immediately respond to questions.

Beijing cut import duties on foreign autos to 15 percent in July but added a 25 percent penalty for U.S.-made vehicles the following month in response to Trump’s tariff hikes.

But can China be trusted? Its contentious tech policies lie at the heart of its economic vision, and Beijing could prove reluctant to sacrifice its ambition, no matter what longer-term agreement with the United States it eventually reaches.

“Make no mistake about it: The issues that we have with China are deep structural issues, and you’re not going to resolve all of them in 90 days or even 180 days,” said Dean Pinkert, a former commissioner on the U.S. International Trade Commission and now a partner at the law firm Hughes Hubbard & Reed. The Trump administration is “going to have to decide how much progress they need in order to define it as a win.”

Parag Khanna, founder of the FutureMap consultancy and author of the forthcoming book “The Future is Asian,” noted that in speeches to domestic Chinese audiences, Xi is still promoting the economic self-reliance that Made in China 2025 symbolizes.

“What he’s saying to his own people has more long-term validity than what he’s saying to Trump over dinner for the sake of everyone saving face,” Khanna said.

Even so, the Buenos Aires breakthrough may calm investors who worried about financial damage from the trade hostilities. Caterpillar, Ford and other U.S. corporate giants have complained that the higher Trump tariffs, if kept in place, would guarantee higher costs and lower profits. That’s one reason the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled this fall after hitting a record close Oct. 3.

In the meantime, just as Trump dialed back the drama on one trade front over the weekend, he magnified the tension on another. En route from Buenos Aires on Air Force One, the president told reporters that he would soon notify Congress that he’s abandoning the North American Free Trade Agreement. Such a move would force lawmakers to approve the NAFTA replacement he reached Sept. 30 with Canada and Mexico — or have no North American trade bloc at all. The absence of any such bloc would hurt companies that have built supply chains that crisscross the three countries’ borders.

“This trades one trade uncertainty for another,” Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, tweeted. “Policy uncertainty remains unusually high for an economy that on paper should be feeling fat and happy.”

Prospects in Congress for the new deal — the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement — were complicated by the midterm elections, which left opposition Democrats in control of the U.S. House. Democrats favor provisions of the USMCA that encourage automakers to shift production back to the United States. But they say the deal must do more to protect U.S. workers from low-wage Mexican competition.

“The work is not done yet,” Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio told CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday.

Alaska putting pieces back together after quake

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The supply chain of food and other goods delivered to the Port of Anchorage from the Lower 48 has not been disrupted by the powerful earthquake that caused widespread damage to roads in the Anchorage area.

“The ships are coming in on schedule, the supply lines are at this point uninterrupted,” Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz said Sunday at a news conference.

The magnitude 7.0 earthquake rattled the state’s largest city early Friday morning swaying buildings and fraying nerves. There were no reports of deaths, serious injuries or structural damage to buildings.

Roads, however, took the brunt of the damage, especially the scenic Glenn Highway, the closest thing Alaska has to an interstate and links the state’s largest city to suburban communities to the north.

Traffic has been snarled since the quake. Delays came as drivers were diverted around road damage on temporary detours or the highway was reduced to one lane while crews try to reconstruct the roadway after the temblor caused sinkholes and buckled pavement.

Employees who live north of Anchorage are being encouraged to take today off or work from home if possible to reduce traffic. Gov. Bill Walker, who leaves office at noon today, gave state workers in the Anchorage area the day off to help reduce the number of cars on the highway. Schools have been closed until Dec. 10, which should also reduce traffic.

Walker said he would not be traveling to the rural village of Noorvik for the swearing in of Gov.-elect Mike Dunleavy today but instead would remain in Anchorage to keep working on recovery efforts.

Roads aren’t the only transportation worry in Alaska.

About 90 percent of all the goods sold in Alaska are delivered to the Port of Anchorage, where officials have completed a preliminary damage assessment.

“Everything looked good,” Municipal Manager Bill Falsey said. “There was some structural concerns with some of the trestles. We have got some things on a watch list but nothing that should impede operations.”

Two major cargo companies operate at the port. One was offloading barges as normal on Sunday, and the other company is scheduled to offload barges today after successfully testing their crane system.

Jet fuel was also being unloaded at another terminal Sunday.

“We’re estimating we have on hand now automotive gasoline supplies that will be good for at least three weeks, and that the next shipment comes in on Dec. 7,” he said. “We’re not expecting any disruptions to those supply chains.”

Officials on Saturday encouraged Alaskans not to make a run on grocery stores, saying there was no reason to hoard food.

However, at least one grocery store Sunday morning had no milk and little to no bread, bottled water or bananas.

Berkowitz said the stories he’s heard, particularly from grocery stores, in the immediate aftermath of the earthquake was of cooperation and sharing.

“Even when people were initially concerned, people who might have been reaching for the last item, looked over and saw someone else and said, ‘Yes, we are sharing this with you,’” he said.

He also touted Alaskans’ longstanding tradition to stock up for long winters.

“I would encourage people, once the ships get in, once things settle back down, make sure you have the emergency preparations, the emergency kits that you should have,” he said.

Schools will be closed for the week so damage assessments can be conducted on about 4,000 classrooms in 86 schools and four other facilities, comprising 8 million square feet, to make sure they are safe for staff and students, Superintendent Dr. Deena Bishop said Sunday.

Ponies lose to Burlington

The Iola Middle School Ponies fell victim to Burlington at home last Thursday by a score of 48-13.

The Ponies scored just two points in three out of four quarters with seven points scored in the second quarter.

The Ponies were led by Aysha Houk who had four points followed by Cali Riley who had three and Celina Caron, Jadyn Kaufman and Dallyn McGraw who all had two points.

McGraw and Caron had six rebounds and Riley had five followed by four for Kaufman, three for Houk and one for Crystal Lindsey and Louise Caron.

Celina Caron and Kauffman each had a steal.

The Ponies will travel to Prairie View today for their second-to-last game of the season.

 

MVJH finds success versus Arma and Uniontown

Marmaton Valley Junior High girls’ basketball had some success last week winning four out of the five games that they played.

On Tuesday, the Wildcat A, B and C teams took on Northeast-Arma and won in the A and C games.

Marmaton Valley won the A game 29-24. Janae Granere had 10 points, Roslyn Houk had six points, Nasna Gregory had five points and Brynn Newman and Payton Scharff each had four points.

They then won the C-Team game 12-4. Brooklyn Adams had eight points and Kaitlyn Drake had four points.

The B-Team fell just short, losing 20-16. Gracie Yoho had six points and Adams, Mallory Heim, Emma Schmidt, Katrina Woods and Houk each had two points.

Two days later, the Wildcats took on Uniontown and won 28-11 in the A-Team game and 13-2 in the B-Team game. The B-Team only played two quarters.

Granere had 17 points in the A-Team game followed by four for Rayvn Kegler and Scharff, two for Schmidt and one for Newman. 

The B-Team had six players with two points including Tayven Sutton, Drake, Adams, Gregory, Yoho, and Woods. Houk had one point.

Up next, the Wildcats will travel to Crest today.

 

Cubs wrestle at Caney

The Humboldt wrestling team traveled to Caney Valley on Saturday to compete in the KanOkla Wrestling tournament and came away with several top three finishes in the varsity and junior varsity/girls division.

Senior Dagen Goodner led the way with a 5-1 day after pinning Coffeyville’s Josh Phillips, Pawhuska, Okla.’s Bryce Drummond and Shawnee Heights’s Zyree White.

Goodner lost in the 195-pound first place championship match to Coffeyville’s Brandon Barrager in a 7-3 decision.

Senior David Watts was the other top three finisher.

Watts finished 4-1 with pins over Cherryvale’s Kaleb Ogle, Caney Valley’s Braden Smith and Bartlesville, Okla.’s Ridge Brewington whom Watts took down in the 285-pound third-place match.

His only loss was to Tristian McCartney of Pawhuska, Okla. who pinned Watts in 1:44.

Other finishes included 132-pound senior Gunner Elder who finished sixth with a 3-3 record, 160-pound senior Ried Barnett who also finished sixth with a 3-3 record and 126-pound sophomore Clay Shannon who ended the day 0-2.

In the JV/girls division, both Colton Johnson and Ethan Doepke finished second with a 2-1 record. Cheyenne Harris and Anna Goforth also finished second.

William Todd and Andrew Watts both finished fourth.

The Cubs will be in action again on Friday when they travel to Fredonia.

K-State coach Snyder retiring after 27 seasons

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Bill Snyder already was considered the architect of the greatest turnaround in college football history before he decided to return from a three-year retirement to resurrect Kansas State again.

Now, the 79-year-old coach is heading back into retirement.

Snyder decided to step away Sunday after 27 seasons on the sideline, ending a Hall of Fame tenure in Manhattan that began in the Big Eight and weathered seismic shifts in college football. Along the way he overcame throat cancer, sent dozens of players to the NFL and gave countless more an opportunity to succeed not only on the field but also in life.

“Coach Snyder has had an immeasurable impact on our football program, Kansas State University, the Manhattan community and the entire state of Kansas,” Wildcats athletic director Gene Taylor said. “He and his family have touched the lives of so many people, from student-athletes, coaches, staff and fans, and he is truly one of the greatest coaches and leaders in college football history.

“His impact on college football is unmatched and legacy is one that will last a lifetime.”

The Wildcats fell apart during a season-ending loss to Iowa State, leaving them 5-7 and at home for the bowl season. Snyder finishes with a resume featuring a record of 215-117-1, trips to 19 bowl games, two Big 12 championships and a legacy that will endure long into the future.

The highway leading into town already has been renamed in his honor, leading fans from Interstate 70 to the stadium that bears the name of his family. A large bronze statue of Snyder stands outside.

Taylor said the search for a new coach will begin immediately with help from Ventura Partners, and a clause in Snyder’s contract indicates he will have input in the decision. Taylor also said Snyder will exercise a clause that allows him to become a special ambassador to the university at a yearly salary of $250,000 for “as long as he is physically and mentally able.”

“This university, this community and this state are deeply indebted to Coach Bill Snyder,” Kansas State president Gen. Richard Myers said. “He came here, and stayed here, because of the people. He made us a family — a proud purple family who travel in record numbers to watch him lead the Wildcats to victories, bowls and rankings never achieved before.”

 

That Grinchy feeling

Miss Chelsea’s Dance Academy will bring a Dr. Seuss classic to the Bowlus Fine Arts Center stage tonight with “Grinchmas.” At left, Hallie McDermeit, left, and Emily Weide are Young Max and Old Max, respectively. At right, Lauren McDermeit is the titular Grinch. Advance tickets for the 7 o’clock show sell for $10 apiece, and are available by calling (620) 228-3424. Tickets at the door cost $12 apiece. 

Vespers returns

One of Iola’s oldest holiday traditions returns Dec. 9.

Iola’s Christmas Vespers, a choir consisting of several area vocalists, will perform a medley of Christmas songs at 3 p.m. Dec. 9 at the Wesley United Methodist Church.

The singers have been rehearsing for the concert since late September.

Over 62 years ago, members of the Iola Music Club started the Iola Christmas Vespers as a musical gift to the community. Now a local tradition, with concerts held on a Sunday afternoon in early December, singers, instrumentalists and directors volunteer their rehearsal time to provide the holiday concert in the sanctuary of one of the local churches. Some years a pipe organ, bell choir or instrumental ensemble may be featured. This year, Wesley, with its fine pipe organ, hosts the event.

When the music club dissolved in 2002, the board members of the Southeast Kansas Christian Artist Series (SEKCAS) were asked to sponsor Iola Christmas Vespers and have done so ever since with the assistance of several community volunteers. SEKCAS, a local not-for-profit organization, was formed in 1999 in an effort to bring to the area professional Christian musical performers.

This year, Jan Knewtson is directing the choir again, Jan Kershner is the pianist, and Kathleen McCollam is the organist. The intermission will be filled talented young people from Allen College, along with Stephen Gilpin who will play the bagpipes.