Heroes assemble

It’s a lucky thing that no major disaster struck planet Earth Saturday morning, for it was during these tranquil hours that a significant percentage of the world’s superheroes converged on Iola High School for the annual Iola Family Reading Festival. Batman. Superman. Wonder Woman. “Super Roger” Carswell, the town librarian. Captain America. The Flash. Pictured, above, the actual Spider-Man rested his weary bones long enough to enjoy a performance in the festival lecture hall. At right, clockwise, caped crusaders Linda Johnson and Julie Strickler supermanned the book table, which featured titles from the event’s many visiting authors; wonder women, sisters, Zoey and Scarlett Scheibmeir, landed long enough to be photographed; The Flash, aka Maddux Franklin, leapt a skyscraper, then another; finally, writer and critic Brian McTavish relayed for a small crowd the history of international comic art, from “The Adventures of Mr. Obadiah Oldbuck” (1837) to today’s graphic novel.

REGISTER/RICK DANLEY

Veterans events scheduled

Activities honoring America’s armed forces are planned for Saturday and Sunday in Iola and Humboldt in honor of Veterans Day.

The events kick off at 7:30 a.m. Saturday at Iola’s First Christian Church, where breakfast will be served to the veterans and their spouses. The meal runs until 10 o’clock.

The scene shifts to Jump Start Travel Center, 1700 East St., at 9:00 a.m., where a giant American flag will be raised for the first time on a recently erected flag pole to greet motorists approaching Iola from the east.

Former Magistrate Judge George Levans, who served in the Marines, will deliver the keynote address at 11:00 a.m. in front of the Veterans Wall on the courthouse square.

The speech will culminate with a balloon launch in recognition of Kansas servicemen either missing in action or prisoners of war.

The noon parade embarks from North Jefferson, heads south to the south side of the square, west along Madison and north on Washington. Any veteran who wishes to take part in the parade is invited to ride one of the floats.

A Humboldt Helicopter flyover will kick off the parade, weather permitting.

The parade also is open to youngsters.

Those who walk the parade route will be given ice cream, courtesy of Scoops and More, and a one-hour pass to Endless Summer.

The Iola Elks Lodge will wrap up Saturday’s activities after the parade with a lunch following the parade. Veterans and their immediate family members are invited.

 

HUMBOLDT’S activities on Sunday, presented by the Humboldt Historic Preservation Alliance and Humboldt Historical Society, will occur on the 100th anniversary of the original Armistice Day, the day fighting ceased to end World War I.

The community’s church bells will ring at 11 a.m., followed by peace prayers.

A downtown parade kicks off at 2 p.m., starting at Sixth and Bridge streets, and featuring a color guard, Humboldt High School marching band, military vehicles, decorated bicycles and Sons of Union Veterans. Transportation for veterans will be provided.

In case of inclement weather, the event will shift to the Humboldt Community Fieldhouse.

 

AREA schools are getting into the act on Friday.

Marmaton Valley High School will host all local veterans for a free meal at 11:30 a.m., followed by a matinee viewing of the school play, “Just Another High School Play,” that runs this weekend.

The fourth-grade class at Iola’s Lincoln Elementary School will present a veterans program at 2:15 p.m. in the school gymnasium. Relatives of the fourth-graders who are current or former military personnel will speak.

 

Terry Shelton

Terry E. Shelton, age 57, died Friday, Nov. 2, 2018, at the Neosho Memorial Regional Medical Center, Chanute. He was born on April 5, 1961, in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, to Patricia Louise Shelton. He married Robin Schields.

Survivors include a son, Terry (TJ) Shelton, Jr., Iola; two daughters, Dani Pratt, Iola, and Tea Shelton, Humboldt; and other relatives.

A celebration of life memorial service was Sunday at his daughter’s home in Iola.

Memorials are suggested to the Terry Shelton Memorial Fund, and may be left with Feuerborn Family Funeral Service, Iola.

Benefit helps woman with rare cancer

Friends and family turned out in droves Sunday for a “Rumble and Rally” for Monica Sellman, who is being treated for a rare form of skin cancer.

The rally, consisting of a meal and auction, will help cover expenses incurred by Sellman, who must travel to Rochester, Minn., for treatment and a clinical study.

She twice has been diagnosed with melanoma, first in 2009, and then again this past summer.

While the cancerous spots have been removed surgically both times, subsequent genetic testing revealed Sellman remains at risk for the cancer to return. She also is susceptible to other variations of cancer, including pancreatic cancer.

But since her melanoma was at stage 2B, the government regulates the medication she can take. (Had she been at stage 3 or 4, she would have been eligible to get local treatment.)

That led her to the clinical study at Rochester’s Mayo Clinic.

“The concern now is that my cancer will come back in a location that is not curable,” she wrote. “That’s why treatment is necessary to kill off the bad cells.”

She underwent her first treatment Oct. 22, with a number of follow-up appointments scheduled over the next several months.

The clinical study covers only the medication and lab work.

“I hope by sharing my experience, that it will help someone else,” she wrote in a summation about her diagnosis. “My goal is to beat this and help our cancer research find a cure.”

 

Penguin visit

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Conservation Connection at the Topeka Zoo on Thursday will feature a Humboldt penguin from the Kansas City Zoo.

The event will discuss how the Humboldt penguins of Punta San Juan of Peru, as well as other species of penguins, are struggling to survive in the wild.

The Kansas City Zoo partners with other accredited zoos to help keep the designation of Punta San Juan as a Marine Reserve under the Peruvian Protected Areas System, and securing the future of the Humboldt Penguin in Peru.

FBI investigating 3 Sedgwick county commissioners

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — An attorney says the FBI is investigating three Sedgwick County commissioners because they tried to fire County Manager Michael Scholes after he cooperated with an FBI investigation.

Lawyer Austin Parker is representing County Counselor Eric Yost. He said Friday that commissioners David Unruh, David Dennis and Michael O’Donnell tried to fire Scholes because he cooperated with an FBI investigation into O’Donnell.

The Wichita Eagle reported Parker said some commissioners also are trying to fire Yost, who also has spoken to FBI agents.

O’Donnell faces federal charges of wire fraud and money laundering related to his handling of campaign funds in his race for commissioner, and when he was a state senator. He remains on the commission, pending a trial on Jan. 29.

Unruh declined to comment. In a statement, Dennis called said Parker’s comments were “public unsubstantiated allegations.”

Lawrence considering later school start times

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Lawrence school district will survey whether students, parents and staff would support starting high school classes later in the morning.

Lawrence Deputy Superintendent Anna Stubblefield said the surveys will be sent no later than Nov. 12. A phone survey of randomly selected parents also will be conducted.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports phone and online surveys done last school year showed wide support for the change among district parents and high school staff.

The district surveys will ask respondents if they prefer keeping the high school start time at 8:05 a.m. and release time at 3:10 p.m. It will also propose possible changes, such as from 8:30 a.m. and 3:35 p.m., or 9 a.m. and 4:05 p.m.

School board member Rick Ingram says the district will consider the possible challenges of the changes.

One last stop

Paul Davis made a stop Friday night at the Around the Corner coffee shop. Davis, a former state senator, is running for the 2nd District seat in Congress, to replace Lynn Jenkins, who is retiring. Davis, a Democrat, discussed the need for immigration reform, passage of a farm bill, a revamping of the Affordable Care Act, preservation of Medicare and Social Security and the need to invest in the upkeep of roads and bridges.

KU fires Beaty after six wins in 3-plus years

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — David Beaty inherited a football program in disarray when he arrived at Kansas, the years of losing having left the downtrodden Jayhawks short on scholarship players and long on fan apathy.

Not enough has changed over the past three-plus seasons.

So after a loss to Iowa State on Saturday in which the Jayhawks looked unprepared and uninspired, Beaty was informed he would be let go after the season with three games still remaining.

“Philosophically I’ve always been hesitant to make a change in a coaching position, particularly a head coach, during the season,” Kansas athletic director Jeff Long said Sunday night. “The early signing date in December and the new transfer regulations have changed the dynamic and it was my determination that now is the right time to announce this decision.

“Ultimately,” he said, “I did not see a path forward to long-term success in the Big 12.”

Beaty, who is 6-39 with just two Big 12 wins, will begin the end of his tenure with Saturday’s rivalry game at Kansas State. He will be paid $3 million in up to six installments under terms of his contract, which was extended two years through 2021 in late 2016.

“Although my family and I are saddened we will not be a part of the future of this program, I respect (Long’s) decision,” Beaty said in a statement Sunday night. “I am looking forward to every minute of these next three weeks with the finest young men in the country at a university I truly love.”

Beaty arrived at Kansas as a nondescript wide receivers coach from Texas A&M who had stints as the offensive coordinator of the Jayhawks and Rice but had never been a college head coach. The program he inherited was in shambles following the failed tenure of Turner Gill and the abject failure of Charlie Weis, but with an abundance of energy and positivity he began to slowly improve things.

Some of the Jayhawks’ best players, including freshman running back Pooka Williams, were lured to Lawrence despite the losing, and the roster itself is in much better shape.

But Beaty’s success on the recruiting path didn’t translate into enough wins.

Beaty won two games in Year 2 and one last season, and watched as then-AD Sheahon Zenger — the man who had hired him — was fired largely because of the football program’s struggles.

Long said upon his hiring this past summer he would spend the season evaluating the entirety of the program, and hired longtime administrator Mike Vollmar to help. And while Long routinely declined to address Beaty’s future, it became clear from week one that the coach’s job was in peril.

The Jayhawks opened the season with an overtime loss to lower-level Nichols State.

They rebounded to beat Central Michigan and Rutgers, but they lost four more noncompetitive games and Beaty decided to fire offensive coordinator Doug Meacham and take the job upon himself. Kansas upset TCU just over a week ago, but the rare Big 12 win hardly did anything to stir up the fanbase.

The announced crowd against Iowa State on Saturday was 15,543, and more than half were wearing Cyclones red. The embarrassing turnout combined with the poor performance may have sealed Beaty’s fate.

Kansas has often been labeled a “basketball school,” and rightly so given the Jayhawks’ streak of 14 consecutive Big 12 titles. But while gridiron success has been fleeting, Mark Mangino proved as recently as the 2007 season that it is possible. Kansas went 12-1 and won the Orange Bowl that year.

That’s how many games the Jayhawks have won the past six seasons combined.

There have already been some potential coaches bandied about, including former Oklahoma State and LSU coach Les Miles and current North Carolina State coach Dave Doeren, a Kansas native who coached high school football in the Kansas City area and later served on Mangino’s staff.

Regardless, the next coach will take over a program at a crossroads. The roster is better-stocked than when Beaty came onboard, but a massive talent gap still exists. Fan apathy is at historically low levels. And the school is a year into a five-year, $350 million fundraising effort begun by Zenger that was supposed to earmark more than $300 million for much-needed renovations to Memorial Stadium.

There is a new indoor practice facility already under construction, though Long has said he is “reassessing” the rest of the fundraising plan. He explained in mid-September that he preferred to get the football program on solid footing before undertaking any major renovations.

The first step will be hiring a new coach.

ANW Co-op bowls in Pittsburg

The ANW Co-op Special Olympics team competed in the Southeast Regional Youth Bowl in Pittsburg on Oct. 31.

Twenty-two different athletes competed led by nine first-place finishes. Those included Ethan Ballin, Xavier Burrow, Gavin Doolittle, Dakota Fry, Mark McCullough Jr., Alex Morris, Ina Spoor, and Wolfgang Webber.

Aiden Fraker, Ty Johnson, Dakota Knowles, Page Riley, Courtland Sager and Nickoles Stogsdill all finished second.

Mary Sunshine Crites, Noah Dorr, Keegan Hedman, Joel Kincaid, Conner Merando, Fayth Simpson and Jacob Stokes all finished third.