Trump pleads for wall money

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump urged congressional Democrats to fund his long-promised border wall in a somber televised address that was heavy with dark immigration rhetoric but offered little in the way of concessions or new ideas to break the standoff that has left large swaths of the government shuttered for 19 days.

Speaking to the nation from the Oval Office for the first time, Trump argued Tuesday night that the wall was needed to resolve a security and humanitarian “crisis,” blaming illegal immigration for what he said was a scourge of drugs and violence in the U.S. and asking: “How much more American blood must we shed before Congress does its job?”

Democrats in response accused Trump appealing to “fear, not facts” and manufacturing a border crisis for political gain.

Using the formal trappings of the White House, Trump hoped to gain the upper hand in the standoff over his demand for $5.7 billion to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. He plans a visit to the border Thursday as he continues to pitch what was a signature promise of his 2016 presidential campaign.

He addressed the nation as the shutdown stretched through its third week, with hundreds of thousands of federal workers going without pay and some congressional Republicans growing increasingly jittery about the spreading impact of the impasse. Trump will visit the Capitol today to meet with Senate Republicans, and has invited Democratic and Republican congressional leaders to return to the White House to meet with him later that day.

He claimed the standoff could be resolved in “45 minutes” if Democrats would just negotiate, but previous meetings have led to no agreement.

For now, Trump sees this as winning politics. TV networks had been reticent about providing him airtime to make what some feared would be a purely political speech. And that concern was heightened by the decision Tuesday by Trump’s re-election campaign to send out fundraising emails and text messages to supporters trying to raise money off the speech. Their goal: a half-million dollars in a day.

“I just addressed the nation on Border Security. Now need you to stand with me,” read one message sent out after his remarks.

In their own televised remarks, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer accused Trump of misrepresenting the situation on the border as they urged him to reopen closed government departments and turn loose paychecks for hundreds of thousands of workers.

Negotiations on wall funding could proceed in the meantime, they said.

Schumer said Trump “just used the backdrop of the Oval Office to manufacture a crisis, stoke fear and divert attention from the turmoil in his administration.”

In his dire address, Trump ticked off a string of statistics and claims to make his case that there is a crisis at the border, but a number of his statements were misleading, such as saying the new trade deal with Mexico would pay for the wall, or suggesting through gruesome examples that immigrants are more likely to commit crime.

Trump, who has long railed against illegal immigration at the border, has recently seized on humanitarian concerns to argue there is a broader crisis that can only be solved with a wall. But critics say the security risks are overblown and the administration is at least partly to blame for the humanitarian situation.

Trump used emotional language, referring to Americans who were killed by people in the country illegally, saying: “I’ve met with dozens of families whose loved ones were stolen by illegal immigration. I’ve held the hands of the weeping mothers and embraced the grief-stricken fathers. So sad. So terrible.”

The president often highlights such incidents, though studies over several years have found immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than people born in the United States.

Trump has been discussing the idea of declaring a national emergency to allow him to move forward with the wall without getting congressional approval for the billions he’s requested. But he did not mention that Tuesday night.

The partial government shutdown reached its 18th day on Tuesday, making the closure the second-longest in history, and continued today. Hundreds of thousands of federal workers are going without pay, and government disruptions are hitting home with everyday Americans.

Trump was nearly halfway through his 9-minute address before he ever mentioned the border wall, describing it as a request from law enforcement rather than his own longstanding political pledge. He also suggested that his proposal to build the wall from steel, rather than concrete, was a concession to Democrats, although they don’t see it that way.

Trump sought to put the blame on Democrats for the standoff, saying they “will not fund border security.” In fact, House Democrats passed legislation the day they took control of the House that offered $1.3 billion for border security. And Senate Democrats have approved similar funding year after year.

Seeking to keep up pressure on Trump and the Republicans, Pelosi said the House would begin passing individual bills this week to reopen some federal agencies, starting with the Treasury Department to ensure Americans receive their tax refunds. The administration says it will act on its own to ensure the refunds.

Ahead of the speech, the White House sought to shore up GOP support on Capitol Hill, where a growing number of Republicans have been expressing unease with the extended shutdown. But GOP lawmakers were still raising concerns Tuesday, talking about disruptions in payments to farmers and troubles for home buyers trying to get government-backed mortgage loans. Vice President Mike Pence met privately with House Republicans, urging them to “stand strong” and insisting the White House wants to negotiate, according to people familiar with the conversation.

He also told the group that Trump won’t retreat. “That pickup ain’t got reverse in it,” he said.

Rosenstein to leave post

WASHINGTON (AP) — Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed special counsel Robert Mueller and remains his most visible Justice Department protector, is expected to leave his position soon after William Barr is confirmed as attorney general, a person familiar with the plans said today.

Barr, who served in the position in the early 1990s and is President Donald Trump’s pick to do the job again, has a confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee next week and could be in place at the Justice Department as soon as February.

Rosenstein plans to leave at some point after that, though no date has been set and there is no formal plan for the departure, according to the person, who was not authorized to discuss internal conversations publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity. Rosenstein, a former United States attorney in Maryland, will have served as deputy for roughly two years by the time he leaves.

Mueller is investigating Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election and contacts with the Trump campaign. Rosenstein and his chief deputy have continued to maintain day-to-day oversight over the probe, a senior Justice Department official told reporters last month.

Barr would take over control of the investigation, assuming the same final say over major investigative steps that acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker has had since former Attorney General Jeff Sessions was ousted in November.

The White House cast Rosenstein’s departure as his choice. Spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said today Rosenstein had always planned to stay around two years and wants to help with the transition to a new attorney general.

“I don’t think there’s any willingness by the president or the White House to push him out,” Sanders told Fox News. “My guess is he is making room for the new attorney general to build a team that he wants around him.”

Barr has told people close to him that he wanted his own No. 2.

Rosenstein appointed Mueller as special counsel in May 2017 to investigate potential coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign to sway the 2016 election. The appointment followed the recusal of Sessions because of his work on the Trump campaign and Trump’s firing of former FBI director James Comey .

The transition to Barr would come with critical steps in the Mueller investigation expected to unfold in the weeks and months ahead, when the special counsel’s office is expected to report its findings to the Justice Department.

Barr has made critical comments of the Mueller investigation in the past, including an unsolicited memo he sent the Justice Department last year critiquing Mueller’s investigation into whether the president had sought to obstruct justice by firing Comey. Barr is expected to face questioning from Democrats about his views of the Mueller investigation at next week’s hearing.

At a news conference in December, Rosenstein said that Mueller’s investigation would be “handled appropriately” no matter who is overseeing it. He said Barr would be an “excellent attorney general when he is confirmed.”

Rosenstein’s job status has appeared tenuous at times, most notably in September, when he showed up at the White House expecting to be fired over news reports that he had discussed secretly recording the president. But Trump opted not to replace him.

Charles Baker

Charles Robert Baker, age 81, of Iola, passed away Monday, Jan. 7, 2019 at the Allen County Regional Hospital. Charles was born on October 19, 1937 to William Raymond Baker and Eileen (Diehl) Baker in Iola, Kansas.

Charles and Judy (Flynn) Baker were married on Oct. 13, 1959, in Iola.

Charles graduated from Iola High School and Allen Community College. Following high school, he joined the United States Navy, where he served in communications in various locations around the Mediterranean. He was a machinist at H.K. Porter in Chanute, for 20-plus years. After his retirement, he worked on the homestead where he raised cattle and cleared hay meadows of brush, trees, and rocks.

He was a fierce dart thrower, belonging to a league, competing in many area tournaments, and bringing home many trophies. Charles was a member of the National Rifle Association and Iola Elks, and a lifetime member of the V.F.W., the American Legion, and Chanute G.B.B.A Local 198, where he served as president.

Charles was preceded in death by his parents; two brothers, Tommy and Jerry Baker.

Charles is survived by his wife, Judy, of the home; one son, Vance and wife, Rhonda, St. George; one daughter, Crystal Misenhelter and husband, Randall, Iola; five grandchildren; five great-grandchildren. Charles’ family was his life.

A visitation will be from 1:30 to 2 p.m. on Thursday at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service Chapel, 1883 US Hwy 54, Iola. A funeral service will be at 2 p.m. on Thursday at Feuerborn Family Funeral Service Chapel, Iola. Burial will follow in Highland Cemetery, Iola.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorials to the LaHarpe V.F.W., and can be left with Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, Iola.

Condolences may be left for the family at www.feuerbornfuneral.com.

Iola Middle School students recognized

Iola Middle School’s honor roll students for the second nine weeks of 2018-19 are:

Principal’s Honor Roll

(4.0 grade-point average)

Eighth grade — Louise Caron, Caiden Cloud, Elsie Fleming, Macie Hoag, Emma McCormack, Hallie McDermeit, Cali Riley, Jesse Taylor and Travis Wanker.

Seventh grade — Jeremy Adair, Korbin Cloud, Rebekah Coltrane, Keira Fawson, Christopher Holloway, Rio Lohman, Abigail Meiwes, Briggs Michael, Jenna Morrison, Shelby Peters, Japheth Rutoh, Kalibre Smith, Hallie Sutherland and Landon Weide.

Sixth grade — Kindal Bycroft, Elza Clift, Kaysin Crusinbery, Reese Curry, Grady Dougherty, Makayla Dunne, Mariah Jelinek, Lucas Maier, Cole Mathes, Johnathan McCullough, Layla Newkirk, Melanie Palmer, Joshua Pritchard, Kinsey Schinstock, Tavia Skahan, Hailey Stogsdill, Trevor Tatman, Caroline Toland, Madeleine Wanker, Kenleigh Westhoff and Emilia Wilkerson.

Honor Roll

(3.0-3.99 GPA)

Eighth grade — Eli Adams, Holden Barker, Celina Caron, Carly Dreher, Hannah Duncan, Jarrett Hermann, Abigail Hirt, Jadyn Kaufman, Drake Mathew, Dallyn McGraw, Brandon McKarnin, Ta’Kaya Means, Devlyn Reynolds, Sage Shaughnessy, Jake Skahan, Kadin Smith, Kaster Trabuc, Olivia Tremain, Jack White, Luke Wicoff, Cody Wille, Elexia Williams, Haily Wilson, Mercede Wools and Alissa Yarnell.

Seventh grade — Piper Aronson, Emily Atwell, Jasper Bly, Daniel Boeken, Logan Brakel, Aden Cole, Madisyn Cookson, Katelyn Erbert, Jacquelyn Fager, Justice Gile, Kendall Glaze, William Jay, C’Airah Johnston, Carson Keller, Mac Leonard, Anna Lyons, Kennedy Maier, Leeann Maloney, Vivian McCormack, Mateo Miller, Jaydon Morrison, Rylie Olson, Cara Porter, Molly Riebel, Gage Skahan and William Talkington.

Sixth grade — Maxwell Andersen, Cortland Carson, William Chapman III, Kamryn Chavez, Josei Comby, Baylie Crooks, Roper Curry, Keaton DePaola, Kelson DePaola, Harper Desmarteau, Brooklyn Ellis, Alejandro Escalante, Hannah Fleming, Savannah Flynn, Bryce franklin, Makayla Genoble, Braden Gile, Everett Glaze, Jayden Goble, Kale Godfrey, Keith Gomez, Karingten Hall, OJ Hamilton, Teanna Hamilton, Ethan Harris, Katelyn Hicks, Abbigail Hutton, Jordan Kaufman, Kealie Keeler, Raiden Kern, Halle Klotz, Kaylah Lampe, Konner Larney, Natalee Lower, Alana Mader, Alanah Maley, Izabella Marlow, Elisabeth Martin, Jada Martin, Annemariee McCullough, Shaun McLaughlin, Leticia Mendoza Gardner, Kele Michael, Sasha Morgan, Cole Moyer, Kyser Nemecek, LaPrincia Pulley, Ethan Riebel, Charles Rife, Demarco Rose, Brigg Shannon, Maya Shaughnessy, Wesleyjoe Simpson, Emalee Thompson, Indira Trester, Bryce Walden, Amiya Walton, Robert Warren, Griffin Westervelt, Alyssa Williams, Emily Williams, Kegan Wilson, Kenneth (KC) Wilson, Katelyn Womelsdorf and Logan Yocham.

MV Elementary announces honor rolls

MORAN — Marmaton Valley Elementary School has announced its honor rolls for the first semester and second nine weeks of the 2018-19 school year.

First semester

All A’s

Sixth grade — Alexis Carman, Danielle Deer and Brayden Lawson.

Fifth grade — Chris Ferguson, Sophia Heim, Jacee Mattox, Todd Stevenson and Braelyn Sutton.

Fourth grade — Taylen Blevins, Mason Ferguson and Kylie Whitcomb.

Third grade — Brealynn Andres, Layla Cook, Addisyn Drake, Tierce Moore and Tucker Sutton.

All A’s and B’s

Sixth grade — Michael Ard, Piper Barney, Kason Becker, Alexis Bottini, Jaedon Granere, Ty Larue, Trinity Lawson, Lily Mynatt and Ava Newman.

Fifth grade — Rodney Cook, Jakob Gardner, Dierks Kegler, Brian Morgan, Garrett Morrison, Bella Rahming and Kylah Sander.

Fourth grade — Dagan Barney, Calleigh Beal, Makayla Beal, Adalie Boisvert, Andersyn Carr, Hunter Doolittle, Ethan Flyingman, Brendon Newman and Cooper Scharff.

Third grade — Thomas Allee, Eterne’ Allison, Kristina Andres, Colin Ard, Alayna Cook, Ethan Lawson, Jetta Mathews, Joseph McIntire, Kaden McVey, Caylee Pass, Evva Sander, Isabella Sneed, Bryant Uhlrich and Kadience Womelsdorf.

Second nine weeks

All A’s

Sixth grade — Piper Barney.

Fifth grade — Chris Ferguson, Sophia Heim, Jacee Mattox, Todd Stevenson and Braelyn Sutton.

Fourth grade — Taylen Blevins, Mason Ferguson and Kylie Whitcomb.

All A’s and B’s

Sixth grade — Alexis Carman, Danielle Deer, Ty Larue, Brayden Lawson, Lily Mynatt, Ava Newman and Ryan Pugh.

Fifth grade — Rodney Cook, Dierks Kegler, Bella Rahming and Kylah Sander.

Fourth grade — Makayla Beal, Adalie Boisvert, Corbin Bowers, Andersyn Carr, Hunter Doolittle, Lillian Gunn, Brendon Newman and Cooper Scharff.

Third grade — Eterne’ Allison, Brealynn Andres, Kristina Andres, Alayna Cook, Layla Cook, Addisyn Drake, Kaden McVey, Tierce Moore, Caylee Pass, Evva Sander, Tucker Sutton and Bryant Uhlrich.

MVHS students achieve honor roll designation

MORAN — Marmaton Valley Junior-Senior High School has announced its first semester honor rolls for the 2018-19 school year.

Dean’s List

(4.0 grade-point average)

Seniors — Paige Becker, Hannah Dahl, Jasmine Gardner, Elizabeth Johnson, Kari Shadden, Sarah Spillman and Karlie Stephens.

Juniors — Allison Heim, Heather Hicks, Ty Scharff and Rachel Shaffer.

Sophomores — Mykayla Ard, Kaylee Becker and Haylee Meiwes.

Freshmen — Alyson Ard, Jenni Armstrong, Garrett Henderson and Kendall Scharff.

Eighth grade — Zachary Allee, Paulia Ard, Katie Bigelow, Mary Brown, Kaitlyn Drake, Bryce Ensminger, Mallory Heim, Roslyn Houk, Bailey LaRue and Madison Lawson.

Seventh grade — Raveyn Kegler and Payton Scharff.

Principal’s Honor Roll

(3.51-3.99 GPA)

Seniors — Gage Griffith, Isaac Heskett, Patricia Outlan and Shailee Woods.

Juniors — Braden Allison and Nate McAloon.

Sophomores — Dorotea Smith.

Freshmen — Kamryn Boyd, Alexis Elam, Jada Harris, Sarah Harrison, Amberlyn Henshall, Cadience Cook, Rabecca Reiter, Autumn Simpson and Kira Stahl.

Eighth grade — Dylan Drake, Brynn Newman, Kiersten Sander, Emma Schmidt and Tayven Sutton.

Seventh grade — LesLeigh Cary, Na’Sha Gregory and Kody McVey.

Honor Roll

(3.0-3.50 GPA)

Seniors — Caiden Elliott, Colton Sneed, Trenton Vest and Braden Westervelt.

Juniors — Anthony Bottini, Bailey Griffith, Bo Knavel, Kimberleigh Lansdown, Christina Mynatt, Andrej Pejovic, Julianna Sprague and Zoi Yoho.

Sophomores — Alyssa Allison, Kassidy Beggs, Chloe Elam, Lexis Jones and McKenna Lord.

Freshmen — Quincy Adams and Carissa Mattox.

Eighth grade — Tristan Cary, Joseph Kale, Dillion Mullinix, Lorenzi Sexton, Jefferson Spillman, Katrina Woods and Graci Yoho.

Seventh grade — Brooklyn Adams, Noah Allison, Janae Granere and Cooper Schmidt.

 

Kappa Alpha prepares for national, local events

Collene Ellis and Susan Locke were hosts for the Kappa Alpha meeting Monday night. Sixteen members attended.

Roberta Ellis, president, read a letter from the national President, Marilyn Paul, saying a new chapter, Beta Zeta Phi, will be installed in St. Louis.

The sorority’s national convention is June 28-30 in Des Moines. Nine local members plan to attend.

The sorority will host area chapters for the March 9 Founder’s Day celebration at the New Community Building at Riverside Park. The event includes a social at 11 a.m., lunch at noon, and entertainment following.

The Kappa Alphas will be helping the Presbyterian Church with Sunday Soups on Jan. 27. The sorority will make food entrees, as well as help serve the meal. The chapter also voted to bring non-perishable food items to each business meeting to donate to the Iola Community Food Pantry. Both of these projects are keeping with the national platform of “Feeding the Hungry.”

A social will be Jan. 22 at the Allen Community College. Members will meet around 6:30 p.m. at the newly remodeled cafeteria and have dinner. Barbara Anderson and Patty Latta will host the event.

Briefs: Jokic leads Denver past Heat

MIAMI (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 29 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for his fourth triple-double of the season, and his basket with 2.4 seconds left put the Western Conference-leading Denver Nuggets ahead to stay in their 103-99 win over the Miami Heat on Tuesday night.

Jamal Murray had 18 points, Trey Lyles added 15, Paul Millsap had 12 and Torrey Craig finished with 11 points and 16 rebounds for the Nuggets.

It was the 20th career triple-double for Jokic. He also became the second center to post one against the Heat, joining Vlade Divac — who did it for the Los Angeles Lakers on Jan. 8, 1995, exactly 24 years prior to Jokic.

Dion Waiters returned to the lineup and scored 15 points for Miami, which got 13 apiece from Bam Adebayo and Kelly Olynyk, and 12 each from Hassan Whiteside, Josh Richardson and Justise Winslow.

TIMBERWOLVES 119, THUNDER 117

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Andrew Wiggins had a season-high 40 points and 10 rebounds, and the Timberwolves beat Oklahoma City in Ryan Saunders’ first game as Minnesota’s interim coach.

Saunders, just 32 years old, is the son of former Timberwolves head coach Flip Saunders. The team fired Tom Thibodeau on Sunday.

Karl-Anthony Towns scored 20 points and Dario Saric added 15 for the Timberwolves.

Oklahoma City’s Russell Westbrook missed two 3-pointers in the closing seconds that would have given the Thunder the lead. He finished with 25 points and 16 assists.

Paul George scored 27 points and Steven Adams added 20 points and 12 rebounds for Oklahoma City.

Thunder reserve center Nerlens Noel was taken off the court on a stretcher in the third quarter after being hit by Wiggins’ elbow on a dunk attempt. There was no immediate word on Noel’s condition.

WARRIORS 125, KNICKS 95

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Klay Thompson scored 43 points with seven 3-pointers, Stephen Curry had his first double-double of the season with 14 points and a season-best 14 assists, and the Warriors snapped a rare three-game home losing streak by beating the cold-shooting Knicks.

Kevin Durant added 24 points, six rebounds and six assists while Draymond Green had 11 rebounds and 10 of his team’s 36 assists as the Warriors pulled away late in the first half to get back on a winning track at Oracle Arena.

Thompson hit 5 of his first 7 shots and had 12 points by the end of the first, finishing 18 of 29 from the floor — 7 for 16 from long range — and notching his second game with at least 40 points after going off for 52 at Chicago on Oct. 29.

Mario Hezonja scored 19 points for the Knicks, who shot 39.8 percent (35 of 88).

RAPTORS 104, HAWKS 101

TORONTO (AP) — Serge Ibaka scored the winning basket with 17 seconds remaining and Toronto won its sixth straight home game.

Kawhi Leonard scored 31 points, Pascal Siakam had 13 points and 10 rebounds, and Kyle Lowry scored 16 points as the Raptors earned their sixth consecutive win over the Hawks.

OG Anunoby scored 14 points and Ibaka had 13.

John Collins had 21 points and 14 rebounds, Jeremy Lin scored 20 points and Trae Young added 19 for the Hawks, who have lost four of five.

PACERS 123, CAVALIERS 115

CLEVELAND (AP) — Thaddeus Young scored 26 points, Bojan Bogdanovic had 23 and Indiana held off Cleveland’s comeback bid and handed the Cavaliers their 10th straight loss.

Cleveland has the worst record in the league at 8-33. The Cavaliers suffered another injury when forward Larry Nance hurt his right knee in the first quarter and didn’t return.

Victor Oladipo had 17 points and Domantas Sabonis had 15 for the Pacers, who have won seven of eight.

Jordan Clarkson scored 26 points for Cleveland. Alec Burks scored 19 points, Tristan Thompson had 15 points and 13 rebounds and rookie point guard Collin Sexton scored 14.

CLIPPERS 128, HORNETS 109

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Lou Williams had 27 points and 10 assists, and the Clippers beat the Hornets for the ninth straight time at Staples Center.

Montrezl Harrell added 23 points and 11 rebounds, Tobias Harris had 23 and Danilo Gallinari 20 in the Clippers’ third win a row overall.

The Hornets got within two early in the third before the Clippers took control for good. They closed the third on a 17-9 run, led by Harrell’s eight straight points, to take an 86-77 lead into the fourth.

Los Angeles stretched its lead to 20 points in the fourth on Williams’ basket after Gallinari’s 3-pointer. Avery Bradley and Williams hit back-to-back 3-pointers that extended the lead to 121-98.

Malik Monk scored 19 of his 24 points in the fourth for the Hornets.

News from Colony

Christian Church

Jake Riebel gave the Communion meditation Sunday. In Luke 22:42, Jesus prayed in the garden for God to “please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine.” Jesus took God’s wrath upon himself, which he didn’t deserve. When we take Communion, we need to eagerly look forward to the day when we can take the bread WITH Jesus.

Chase Riebel gave the sermon on week 11 of the Believe series titled “Worship.” The next 10  weeks focus on putting our beliefs into action. We are to believe with an active faith as a way of life. And it’s not as important how we worship, but the motivation behind our worship. We can worship in dance, in song, in prayer — whatever comes natural. (Ref: Matthew 23:1-7,1 Samuel 17:26b, 2 Samuel 6:14)

Men’s Bible study  is at 7 a.m. Tuesday. Meal and prayer at the parsonage is at 5:30 p.m. today, with youth group starting at 7 o’clock. Youngsters are welcome to arrive by 4:30.

Working Wonders will meet at 7 p.m. Monday. Small groups will begin again today. A women’s retreat will be at the church and the parsonage from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Jan. 26. All women are welcome.

Cowboy Church

Pastor Leo Ramsey opened the service Sunday with announcements, followed by praise and worship led by Cindy Beckmon and the band, marking the church’s second anniversary.

Apostle Jon Petty, read from Romans 8:1-2 and urged believers not to listen to the wrong voice that encourages words and thoughts of condemnation on others, but love others just as Jesus did.

Although live streaming the morning services on Facebook has presented several challenges, the technicians believe they have resolved the issues thanks to viewer feedback.

Northcott Church

Announcements: Sunday-Guest speaker from Gideons; fellowship and board meeting; Jan. 24-Women of Faith, 6:30 p.m., dinner menu is “new recipe.”

This Sunday is Mission Sunday. Benevolence Sunday is Jan. 20 and Building Fund Sunday is Jan. 27.

January birthdays: 6-JoNita Otto and 23-Ronda West.

Prayer focus: President Trump and Vice President Pence, liberal media, Washington County education. Contact person Leon LaGalle, 620-228-2644.

UMC

Scripture shared at the Jan. 6 service was Psalm 72: 1-7, Isaiah 60: 1-6, Ephesians 3: 1-12 and Matthew 2: 1-12. Pastor Dorothy Welch presented the sermon, “The Journey.”

The January United Methodist Women’s challenge is “Souper Bowl.”

Lions Club

The Jan. 2 meeting was in the Colony Methodist Church basement with 11 members attending.

Jay Dutton, Gene Anderson and Ron McMullen were thanked for their work in delivering the poinsettias to the shut-ins. A list of shut-ins was presented by Jay Dutton.

Mary Scovill and Sue Colgin reported on the adopted Christmas family project. The recipient was happy with what the Lions provided.

Delores McMullen read a letter from Rachel Newland of SVOSH. Rachel is a student optometrist seeking donations for overseas charitable work. Members agreed to donate.

Mary Scovill reported the Kincaid Lions Club assisted Terry Weldin with the eye screening at Crest schools.

Bill Smith reminded the club of the Fun in the Sun Car Show in August. He encouraged the club to have a craft booth at the car show. The booth will be free for the club. The meeting was adjourned by President Delores McMullen.

Around town

Doris Moore, 100, died at Parkview Heights, Garnett, Jan. 4. Funeral services were today at the Colony Community Church. Burial followed at the Colony Cemetery.

Last Colony news

It was October 1971 when I began writing the Colony News for the Iola Register. I have always enjoyed writing, began writing in grade school with letters to pen pals from our Missouri farm where I was born and raised.

When my husband and I moved here in June 1957 I did not know anyone, only had met my husband’s parents once. My mother, however, was familiar with Colony. When she was 5, she spent a summer here with her aunt and uncle. She knew of a few people that still lived here.

Our son, Mark, was born in July 1958 and our daughter, Cheryl, in March 1960. My husband farmed with his dad and the kids and I helped out in the fields during farming months.

As I became acquainted with Colony people and an opening came along, I was hired to write the Colony News. It worked in well with farming, raising our children, and keeping up with Colony people who volunteered their news for the paper. It was a service I enjoyed for the Colony community.

But it is now time for me to give myself more time. I am 88 and my health is not what it used to be. I need more rest and visits to doctors. I wish to thank all those who have contributed to the Colony News. I have appreciated each and every one of you.  God Bless all.  Mary A. Luedke

Jazmine’s death a tragedy in every way

It was easy to believe. A 7-year-old black girl had been shot to death while riding in a car with her mother and three sisters. Witnesses described the possible assailant as a white man. Immediately racism was suggested as the likely motive. And why not? White separatists seem emboldened these days. The FBI says hate crimes are up in America.

But now an apparent confession suggests Jazmine Barnes’ murder isn’t one of them. Does that make her death any less of a tragedy? Only if we’ve accepted the solemn drumbeat of news reports involving child gun deaths as predictable background noise.

Add Jazmine’s name to a long list of innocent children killed when gunfire erupts where they are supposed to feel safe — outside their home, in places of worship, at school, or riding in the car with their mom to the store. That’s what Jazmine was doing when she was shot Dec. 30 in northeast Houston. “I turned around and my 7-year-old was shot in the head,” said Jazmine’s mother, LaPorsha Washington, who was shot in the arm.

In a hail of glass and bullets, a young girl with a big laugh who loved purple and playing dress up was gone. Six days later police arrested a suspect who implicated an accomplice. Neither Eric Black Jr. nor Larry Woodruffe is white. Black reportedly told Harris County authorities the suspects shot into the wrong car thinking it belonged to someone else.

That eyewitnesses got it wrong isn’t surprising. The Innocence Project says eyewitness misidentification is the greatest contributing factor to wrongful convictions.

Police said an unidentified white man in a red truck recorded by surveillance video was not a suspect, but that didn’t convince everyone. “They’re going to have to prove this to me, because I know how they can do to cover themselves,” said Juanita Bell.

Such mistrust of police can make a community more dangerous. Add too many guns and you have besieged neighborhoods resembling the Wild West.

The Brady Campaign says eight children and teens die from gun violence every day in America. Among them the baby and two other young children killed last week in Texas City by their father, who had a history of domestic abuse.

Though Jazmine’s murder may not be race-related, that’s not a license for complacency.

Ending racism requires changes in the heart encouraged by leaders who set an example. Ending gun violence merely requires common sense. Congress could pass stricter gun purchase laws. Texas could join the states with “extreme risk” laws that limit gun access for people with histories of violence.

Race hatred may draw more headlines, but any child’s life cut short by a bullet deserves action.