Warriors beat Grizzlies to break tie with Nuggets in West

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Stephen Curry and Kevin Durant each scored 28 points, with Durant going 12 of 13 from the field, and the Golden State Warriors beat the Memphis Grizzlies 118-103 on Wednesday night to take sole possession of the Western Conference lead.

Curry also had 10 rebounds, and DeMarcus Cousins added 16 points and nine rebounds to help the Warriors break a tie with idle Denver for the top spot in the West.

Jonas Valanciunas led Memphis with 27 points and 13 rebounds, and Mike Conley added 22 points to take the franchise’s career scoring lead and added eight assists. Bruno Caboclo had 17 points and 13 rebounds.

Durant scored seven straight points in a 9-0 run that made it 100-92 midway through the fourth quarter.

THUNDER 107, PACERS 99

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Paul George scored 31 points against his former team, and Oklahoma City had a 24-0 run in the third quarter to pull away from Indiana.

Steven Adams had 25 points and 12 rebounds, and Russell Westbrook added 17 points, 12 assists and 11 rebounds for his 29th triple-double of the season. The Thunder won for only the second time in seven games.

Bojan Bogdanovic scored 28 points for Indiana, and Domantas Sabonis added 18 points and 10 rebounds.

WIZARDS 124, SUNS 121

PHOENIX (AP) — Devin Booker became the youngest player in NBA history with consecutive 50-point games, but his latest scoring binge was wasted once again by last-place Phoenix in a loss to Washington.

Thomas Bryant’s three-point play with 2.8 seconds left put the Wizards ahead for good in a back-and-forth game. Bryant caught Bradley Beal’s pass off a baseline drive and dropped in the winning layup while getting fouled. After he added the free throw, Phoenix had one more chance to tie, but Troy Daniels missed a 3-pointer from the corner just before the final buzzer.

The 22-year-old Booker finished with 50 points and 10 rebounds as the Suns, with the worst record in the Western Conference at 17-59, dropped their fifth straight. 

Immigrants accused of piracy as standoff ends

VALLETTA, Malta (AP) — A Maltese special operations team boarded a tanker today that had been hijacked by migrants rescued at sea and recaptured control of it before escorting it to a Maltese port. Italy’s hard-line interior minister slammed the migrants as pirates but aid groups rejected that label, saying the European Union’s policy of sending migrants back to lawless Libya was to blame.

Armed military personnel stood guard on the ship’s deck, and a dozen or so migrants were also visible, as the Turkish oil tanker El Hiblu 1 docked today at Boiler Wharf in the city of Senglea. Five suspected ringleaders were led off in handcuffs.

In all, the Turkish tanker rescued 77 men, 19 women and 12 minors, including toddlers, Malta officials said. One pregnant woman and one child were being treated at a hospital as a precaution.

Authorities in Italy and Malta on Wednesday said the group had hijacked the vessel after it rescued them in the Mediterranean Sea off Libya, and forced the crew to put the Libya-bound vessel on a course north toward Europe.

Maltese armed forces established communications with the captain while the ship was still 30 nautical miles offshore. The captain said he was not in control of the vessel “and that he and his crew were being forced and threatened by a number of migrants to proceed to Malta,” the armed forces said.

No details were given of what force or threats were used, and there was no immediate word on the condition of El Hiblu 1’s crew.

A military official not authorized to speak to the media said that the migrants did not have weapons, but that the captain and crew were outnumbered and forced to surrender.

Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini on Wednesday described the takeover as “the first act of piracy on the high seas with migrants” as the alleged hijackers.

Salvini, who insisted the ship would not be allowed to dock in Italy, today praised the Malta’s interception.

“Immigration is managed by criminals and should be blocked by any legal means necessary,” Salvini was quoted as saying by the Italian news agency ANSA.

Humanitarian organizations rejected Salvini’s characterization of piracy, saying that migrants have been repeatedly mistreated, raped and tortured in Libya. They have long protested EU protocols to return migrants rescued offshore to the lawless northern African nation.

The aid group Sea Watch said the migrants’ actions “were in self-defense against the deadly consequences forced upon them by Europe’s inhumane border policy.”

The ship had been heading toward Italy’s southernmost island of Lampedusa and the island nation of Malta when Maltese forces intercepted it. The special team that restored control to the captain was backed by a patrol vessel, two fast interceptor craft and a helicopter.

Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said on Twitter that the nation’s armed forces had conducted a “sensitive operation on high seas.”

“We do not shirk responsibility despite our size,” he said, pledging to follow international rules.

Still, both Italy and Malta have refused to open their ports to humanitarian ships that rescue migrants at sea, which has created numerous standoffs as European governments haggle over who will take them in.

A private group that operates a rescue ship and monitors how governments treat migrants, Mediterranea, urged compassion for the group on the hijacked vessel in Malta. It said it hoped European countries would act “in the name of fundamental rights, remembering that we are dealing with human beings fleeing hell.”

Mass migration to Europe has dropped sharply since 2015, when the continent received 1 million refugees and migrants from countries in the Middle East, Asia and Africa. The surge created a humanitarian and political crisis in which desperate migrants frequently drowned at sea when overloaded smuggling boats capsized. Key arrival spots such as Italy and Greece have then struggled to house large numbers of asylum-seekers.

Along with the dangerous sea journey itself, those who attempt to cross the Mediterranean risk being stopped by Libya’s coast guard and held in Libyan detention centers where human rights groups say beatings, rapes, abuse and torture are routine.

EU members “alert the Libyan coast guard when refugees and migrants are spotted at sea so they can be taken back to Libya, despite knowing that people there are arbitrarily detained and exposed to widespread torture, rape, killings and exploitation,” said Matteo de Bellis, an expert on migrants for Amnesty International.

European Union countries, facing some domestic opposition to welcoming immigrants, have decided to significantly downscale an EU rescue operation in the Mediterranean and have decided in principle to withdraw their ships, which would mean continuing the mission with air surveillance only. A formal decision has to be made by Sunday, when the mission’s mandate expires.

“This shameful decision has nothing to do with the needs of people who risk their lives at sea, but everything to do with the inability of European governments to agree on a way to share responsibility for them,” de Bellis said.

Commercial ships have been increasingly caught between European governments hostile to taking in new migrants and the international maritime law’s obligation to save people needing help at sea.

Last November, dozens of migrants seized control of a container ship that had picked them up in the Mediterranean, barricading themselves inside and refusing to disembark in the Libyan port of Misrata. After 10 days, Libyan authorities forcibly removed them from the ship and brought them to a detention center.

During the standoff, several migrants on the vessel told The Associated Press that six commercial ships had seen their rickety boat foundering but passed them by before they were picked up by the seventh.

Last few Masters spots on the line at Match Play

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — For players trying to get into the top 50 for a Masters invitation, it was critical to get into the 64-man field at the Dell Technologies Match Play with big ranking points available in the final week to be eligible through the world ranking.

Trouble is, everyone from the top 66 — Adam Scott and Rickie Fowler are skipping — also is at Austin Country Club.

Eleven players in the field have yet to qualify for the Masters, and what’s required of them at Match Play depends on their ranking. Russell Knox, Lee Westwood, Tom Lewis and Luke List likely will have to advance to Sunday’s semifinals to break into the top 50.

Abraham Ancer and Chez Reavie likely would have to reach the quarterfinals, where players are assured a four-way tie for fifth.

Going into the week, the only current players in the top 50 not already eligible for the Masters are Shane Lowry (No. 48) and Justin Harding (No. 49). They might not have to advance from their groups to secure their positions, but winning or halving matches wouldn’t hurt.

Others who are poised to make a move include Byeong Hun An, Andrew Putnam and Jim Furyk, who didn’t even have the Masters in mind until his runner-up finish at The Players Championship moved him up more than 100 spots and into the Match Play field.

Harding and List are in the same group, while Lowry and Putnam also are in the same group.

Meanwhile, Sungjae Im closed with a 70 at Innisbrook last week and moved into a tie for fourth. That moved him up 13 spots to No. 59. Im is at the PGA Tour event in the Dominican Republic this week, which offers a minimum 24 points to the winner even with a weak field. He has a mathematical chance of getting into the top 50.

No one at the Hero Indian Open on the European Tour can get into the top 50.

No matter how it unfolds, Augusta National is assured of another small field, which is what the Masters wants to create the best experience for its guests. The field last year was 87, the smallest since 1997.

Currently, there are 84 players who have qualified and are expected to play.

Prairie Dell visits Lone Elm

The Prairie Dell 4-H Club traveled to Lone Elm for its monthly meeting March 18, a joint meeeting with the Seekers Not Slackers 4-H Club. 

The meeting was held at the Lone Elm Community Center.

The club members started the meeting by taking roll call using their pets’ names, followed by the flag salute and 4-H Pledge.

Annika Hobbs thanked the hosts for inviting Prairie Dell.

The elected officers gave their minutes and reports followed by individual demonstrations. 

The first was Timber Vermillion with her rabbits. She brought three of her rabbits and owns 32. The second demonstration was by Kinley Edgerton. She showed how to make cake pops.

The meeting ended with singing “Happy Birthday” to the club members with a March birthday. A game of freeze tag followed.

Refreshments were served following the meeting.

— Peyton Weast, reporter

 

 

Iola Public Library events on tap in April

Programs at Iola Public Library during April begin with the Intrepid Readers book discussion. The book selection is “Fascism: A Warning” by Madeleine Albright. Born Jewish and raised Catholic, Albright fled Czechoslovakia with her family in 1948, to grow up in Colorado. The former U.S. Secretary of State discusses how her life and views have been shaped by tyranny and examines the alarming signs of a global resurgence. The program is at 2 p.m. April 4.

“Library Themed Comic Strips” will be shown at a program following the Friends of the Library’s spring meeting at 7 p.m. April 8. Library Director Roger Carswell will show a selection of library and book-themed comic strips from a large collection he has accumulated. Featured comics come from Peanuts, Calvin & Hobbes, Pearls Before Swine, Blondie, Family Circus and more.  All are welcome to attend. The program will be held in the Flewharty-Powell Annex, 211 East St.

TLC Garden Center owner Savannah Flory and Master Gardener Judy Arbeiter will present “Blooms for Porch and Patio” at 7 p.m. April 11. Arbeiter will demonstrate and discuss choosing the right pots, soil types and plant combinations. Flory will highlight pot-friendly shrubs, annuals and perennials.

The final program in the “A Message of Hope” series will focus on “Empowerment & Consent.” Donita Gardner, Child Advocacy Center Coordinator of Hope Unlimited, will talk about ways to boost confidence and what consent truly entails. The program is on 2 p.m. April 13 in the Fleharty-Powell Annex.

The monthly Pinterest Party will be at 6 p.m. April 15. Participants will recycle some old books to make shelf sitters. The class is limited to 25 people. Pre-registration and fee of $3 are required by April 12.  

Shane Schauf will present “…And We Sauntered Over the Mountains…: On Traversing the Appalachian Trail” at 7 p.m. April 18.

In the pre-dawn light, the Appalachian Trail appears as a silver ribbon winding among the trees and over the hilltops. This silver ribbon, often no wider than a few feet, stretches from Maine to Georgia. It not only connects Mount Katahdin in Maine with Springer Mountain in Georgia, but also connects the towns and peoples who line it.

Schauf shares his encounter with the serenity of nature, the kindness of strangers, and the joy of comradeship as he traversed America’s most iconic thru-hiking trail.  

Repeated from last fall by request is “The Amateur History Guy Looks At … Key Moments in American History.” Carswell identifies and explains some key moments in our nation’s history. These range from the well-known (Cornwallis’ surrender and the Battle of Gettysburg) to little known. How did George Washington’s act of putting on his spectacles one day in 1783 likely change the course of history? Or what about Jefferson’s dinner party in 1790? The program is at 7 p.m. April 25.

Unity Club discusses Obama memoir

Donna Lower-Nord hosted 17 Unity Club members at her home Wednesday.

Helen Ambler reviewed Michelle Obama’s memoir, “Becoming.” 

Obama shared stories about being a first lady, as well as a full-time mother, wife and working woman. But mostly, it’s a story of a young black girl in America, who broke barriers despite taking punches, and and came out winning, Ambler said.

Obama shares insights into the harsh realities of being black in America, from being told by her guidance counselor that she wasn’t “Princeton material” to being described as one of the few “poppy seeds in a bowl of rice” when she did make it to Princeton University.

She also considers several instances where her blackness impacted, and in some cases, worsened, her role as first lady — “swampy parts of the internet,” Ambler said.

Obama heard many comments which questioned and derided her early life, depicting her as a typical welfare queen. 

She also endured ridicule as an adult, including hearing a congressman make a derogatory comment about her posterior.

Through those reflections, she remained thankful for her struggles on her path that led to the White House, Ambler said.

The Unity Club’s next meeting will be at Charyl Link’s home. Ellie Walburn will give the program.

May makes final push to save Brexit deal

LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Theresa May was making a final push today to save her European Union withdrawal deal after her promise to step down gained the agreement some support but failed to win over lawmakers from Northern Ireland.

May pledged Wednesday night that she would quit if the deal were approved, in hopes of blunting opposition from lawmakers in her Conservative Party who have criticized her leadership. May has been under mounting pressure to quit from pro-Brexit Conservatives, who accuse her of negotiating a bad divorce deal that leaves Britain too closely tied to the bloc after it leaves.

Some prominent opponents, including former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, quickly said they would back the agreement, but Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party said it remained opposed because of concern that the deal treats the region differently from other parts of the U.K.

The prime minister’s announcement came as lawmakers rejected eight alternatives to her deal after an unprecedented move to wrest control of the parliamentary agenda from the government in an attempt to find a plan that could break the Brexit deadlock.

A second round of votes is planned on Monday to try to find a plan with majority backing. But the architect of the votes said the inconclusive outcome meant a damaging no-deal Brexit was becoming more likely.

“At the moment we are heading for a situation where, under the law, we leave without a deal on the 12th, which many of us think is not a good solution,” Conservative Party lawmaker Oliver Letwin told the BBC. “And the question is, is Parliament on Monday willing to come to any view in the majority about that way forward that doesn’t involve that result?”

The EU last week extended the Brexit deadline for two weeks, saying Britain would leave the bloc with no deal on April 12 if it doesn’t come up with a plan to break the deadlock by that date. If Parliament approves May’s deal by Friday, the deadline will be extended until May 22 so there is time to pass implementing legislation.

Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay said the outcome of the indicative votes showed “there are no easy options here,” as he urged lawmakers to support May’s deal.

The results of Wednesday’s “indicative votes” underscored the divisions in Parliament, and the country, over Brexit — but also pointed toward a potential compromise.

The idea of remaining in a customs union with the EU came closest to winning a majority, with 264 lawmakers voting for it and 272 voting against. The most popular option was the idea of holding a second referendum on any deal approved by Parliament, which was backed by 268 lawmakers, but opposed by 295.

Both ideas got more support than the 242 votes secured by May’s deal earlier this month.

The plan is for the most popular ideas to move to a second vote Monday to find an option that can command a majority. Parliament would then instruct the government to negotiate it with the EU.

May has said she will consider the outcome of the votes, although she has refused to be bound by the result.

Business groups expressed alarm at the continuing gridlock, which has left companies uncertain whether they will face tariffs, customs checks and other barriers to trade with the EU in just a couple of weeks.

“No one would run a business like this — and it is no way to run a country,” said Adam Marshall, director-general of the British Chambers of Commerce.

He told politicians to stop “chasing rainbows” and “start making tough decisions, however personally or politically difficult they might be.”

Labour Party legislator Margaret Beckett, who sponsored the second referendum proposal, said lawmakers who had been “wedded to particular proposals” now needed to compromise in the national interest.

“They are going to have to look over the abyss,” she said.

Iola Chamber chimes in on political spat

On Monday, members of the board of directors of the Iola Area Chamber of Commerce issued a statement in support of David Toland’s confirmation as Secretary of Commerce.

In a letter addressed to Sen. Julia Lynn, chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, board members said the Chamber, “fully supports” Toland and “We are looking forward to David’s confirmation and our future work together to further improve and grow southeast Kansas.”

The letter also addresses the board’s decision to stand apart from that of their president, Shilo Eggers, who in a separate letter to Sen. Lynn voiced her opposition to Toland.

Excerpts of Eggers’ letter read: “I reside in Woodson County, Kansas. I am the Vice President of Commercial Banking for Landmark National Bank in Iola and am the President of the Iola Area Chamber of Commerce. I am writing to strongly urge you to NOT confirm David Toland as Secretary of Kansas Department of Commerce….  I can attest that Mr. Toland is not the best suited for the position.” 

A look back in time

65 Years Ago

March 1954

Anita Rutledge, a 14-year-old eighth grade student from Humboldt, correctly spelled “sane” and “scarcity” to win the Allen County Spelling Championship in the Jefferson School auditorium here this afternoon. The victory carries with it an all-expenses paid trip to Topeka sponsored by the Register, to compete in the All Kansas Spelling Bee in April. The judges for the county contest were Stanley Toland, Dudley Henderson and the Rev. E. E. Tillotson.

*****

The McAtee Rest Home now cares for 36 aged men and women, Mrs. Charlotte McAtee reported to the Iola Chamber of Commerce at noon today. It is located in the former St. John’s Hospital east of Iola. The McAtees bought the building shortly after the Allen County Hospital opened in 1952. The business hires 10 women in addition to the owners.

Humboldt golf opens season at Caney

The Humboldt golf team fought through the wind and the cold on Monday to open their season with a fifth-place finish at Caney Valley. 

Due to wet and cold conditions, the Cubs came into the meet with very little practice time and it showed from almost everyone. 

Senior Ryan Sellman led the way with a fifth-place 87. He missed out on second by just two shots and head coach Scott Brady hopes his play, especially chipping and putting, takes a big step forward. 

“He has to play better if he hopes to check off some of his goals this year,” Brady said. 

Reid Smith came in after Sellman with a 104 which marked the lowest score of his high school career. 

Drake Hottenstien had 107, Roni Bulk had 128 and Aiden Johnson had 142.

The Cubs will play in a junior varsity meet in Erie on Monday before the varsity hits the links again on Tuesday at Burlington. 

Brady is hoping for some nice weather between now and then but with rain forecast for the end of this week, spring sports’ battle with Mother Nature will continue.