The Concordia Blade
Transcription
The Concordia Blade
BLADE-EMPIRE CONCORDIA VOL. CX NO. 210 (USPS 127-880) CONCORDIA, KANSAS 66901 Monday, March 21, 2016 Obama meets with Cuban president Good Evening Concordia Forecast Tonight, breezy. Not as cool. Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. South winds 15 to 25 mph decreasing to 10 to 15 mph after midnight. Tuesday, warmer. Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. South winds 5 to 20 mph. Tuesday night, partly cloudy. Lows around 50. South winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts to around 25 mph. Wednesday, windy, cooler. Mostly sunny with chance of rain showers and isolated thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 60s. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph increasing to northwest 25 to 30 mph with gusts to around 40 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation 50 percent. Wednesday night, windy. Much colder. Mostly cloudy with snow, possibly mixed with rain. Lows in the upper 20s. Chance of precipitation 60 percent. Thursday, cooler. Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s. Thursday night, mostly clear. Lows in the lower 30s. Friday, not as cool. Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. Friday night, mostly cloudy with slight chance of rain showers. Lows in the upper 30s. Across Kansas HAVANA (AP) — Brushing off decades of distrust, President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro shook hands Monday in Havana’s Palace of the Revolution, a remarkable moment for two countries working to put the bitterness of their Cold War-era enmity behind them. Obama and Castro stood together as a Cuban military band played the national anthems of Cuba and the United States — stunning sounds in a country where resistance to the U.S. has been part of the national mission for decades. Greeting each other warmly, the two leaders inspected an honor guard before sitting down in front of American and Cuban flags. Whether Obama and Castro could use the meeting, one of the first since Cuba’s 1959 revolution and the only one in Cuba, to further the ambitious diplomatic experiment they started 15 months ago was an open question, infusing Obama’s historic trip to Cuba with uncertainty and tension for both governments. For Obama, there was no better place than Havana to show that engagement can do more than isolation to bring about change on the communist island. Yet for the Cubans, the glaring question is whether their own government is ready to prove the ambitious diplomatic opening is more than just talk. American companies, eager for opportunities in Cuba, were wasting no time. Obama announced that tech giant Google had struck a deal to expand Wi-Fi and broadband Internet on the island 90 miles south of Florida. Outside the palace in Havana’s sprawling Revolution Square, Obama posed for a photo in front of a giant sculpture of Ernesto “Che” Guevara, creating an indelible image sure to reverberate in Cuba and beyond. The revolutionary leader was once one of Fidel Castro’s top lieutenants, his face an iconic symbol of Cuba’s revolution that is revered by some but reviled by others. Paying tribute to another Cuban independence hero, Obama adjusted a wreath at the foot of a 59-foot statue of Jose Marti, calling his trip “a historic moment.” “It is a great honor to pay tribute to Jose Marti, who gave his life for independence of his homeland,” Obama wrote in the guestbook. “His passion for liberty, freedom, and self-determination lives on in the Cuban people today.” The long-awaited meeting between Obama and Castro was one of the most scrutinized moments of Obama’s 2 1/2-day trip to Cuba, the first presidential visit in nearly 90 years. The White House’s attempts to get Castro to agree to a joint news conference appeared unsuccessful, and it was unclear whether they’d answer any questions. Obama came to Havana hoping his visit would spur Castro to offer gestures of good faith and meaningful change, undermining critics who accuse Obama of kowtowing to an authoritarian government. In the last year-plus, Obama has taken sweeping steps to lift decades-old U.S. restrictions, and American businesses have eagerly followed suit. Western Union became the latest company to take advantage of Obama’s move last week to relax financial controls, announcing Monday that it will start processing remittances from non-U.S. countries into Cuba. In the last few days, hotel chains Starwood and Marriott have announced plans to operate on the island, and U.S. airlines and cruise lines are poised to begin service soon. To the dismay of Obama and his critics, reciprocal steps by Justices ask judge to dismiss Kline suit TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The seven justices of the Kansas Supreme Court are asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit from former Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the lawsuit is connected to the 2013 decision to indefinitely suspend Kline’s law license over an investigation he led into abortion clinics. Kline’s attorneys argue that the court lacked the four justices necessary to make the decision. That’s because five of the court’s seven justices recused themselves, partially at Kline’s request. The case then was heard by two Supreme Court justices and five other Kansas judges from lower courts. At issue is whether the temporary justices’ votes should count. Kline’s attorneys say they shouldn’t; the defendants say they should. The justices are calling Kline’s arguments “puzzling.” Man dies after crash at dragway WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A hospital spokeswoman says a man has died after a crash at the Kansas International Dragway. The Wichita Eagle reports that the crash happened Sunday afternoon at the speedway in the south-central Kansas town of Maize. The victim was transported to Via Christi Hospital St. Francis in Wichita. Sharon Hurley of Via Christi says the man was in critical condition when he arrived and died less than an hour later. A Sedgwick County dispatcher says the crash victim had participated in a racing event at the speedway. The site was featuring an event called “Import Face-off.” Easter egg hunt goes high-tech OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — An Easter egg hunt has gone high-tech at a suburban Kansas City park. The Kansas City Star reports that children used GPS devices to search for goodies Sunday in Johnson County’s Antioch Park. The Johnson County Park & Recreation District programmed the GPS devices, which were lent to participants in this year’s Easter egg hunt. So many people registered for the event that a second round of searching was added after the first group had spent about an hour gathering eggs. Each child received two eggs, filled with candy or toys, at each of eight caches. Visit us online at www.bladeempire.com Scooping up eggs Jaylin Roush scoops up eggs during the Easter Egg Hunt at the Concordia City Park Saturday morning. (Blade photo by Deanna Kymer) Health insurance gains due to “Obamacare” WASHINGTON (AP) — There’s growing evidence that most of the dramatic gain in the number of Americans with health care coverage is due to President Barack Obama’s law, and not the gradual recovery of the nation’s economy. That could pose a political risk for Republicans running against “Obamacare” in the GOP primaries as they shift to the general election later this year. While the health care law remains highly unpopular in the party, the prospect of taking away health care coverage from millions of people could trigger a backlash if the eventual GOP nominee’s plan to replace it is seen as coming up short. “There are different phases of the campaign,” said GOP pollster Bill McInturff. Playing to like-minded voters in the primaries, Republican frontrunner Donald Trump doesn’t have to spell how he’d replace Obama’s law. “When you get to the general election, the demand for what you are going to do different starts to escalate.” Under “Obamacare,” the share of Americans without health insurance has dropped to a historic low of about 9 percent, with room to go even lower. But even as the economy has expanded, major government surveys point to a lackluster rebound for employer based coverage. “It’s very clear that the Affordable Care Act has done most of the work in decreasing the number of uninsured,” said economist Robert Kaestner of the University of Illinois at Chicago. Cuba have been in short supply. Since succeeding his brother Fidel in 2008, Castro has orchestrated economic and social reforms with broad-based impact, though they appear slow to materialize. Not only are hundreds of thousands of Cubans now able to pursue free enterprise, but restrictions on cellphones and Internet have been eased and citizens feel more comfortable discussing Cuba’s problems. Yet Castro hasn’t budged on changing Cuba’s single-party system or easing strict limits on media, assembly and political dissent. Repeatedly, his government has chided Obama for saying he wanted to empower Cubans. None of that has dissuaded Obama, who insists that any intransigence by Cuba’s government only proves why Cubans will be better off when they’re intimately exposed to American values. On his first full day in Cuba, Obama also planned an event with U.S. and Cuban entrepreneurs aimed at championing Cuba’s fledgling private sector. He was to be feted in the evening at a state dinner, an honor illustrating just how far the U.S. and Cuba have come despite their deep ideological differences. GOP has concerns about reaching target for school aid TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican lawmakers assert that they may never be able to meet the Kansas Supreme Court’s demands for fairness in education funding and will see a chaotic budget process every year as they reshuffle dollars among local school districts. The high court said last month that Kansas has not given poor districts their fair share and schools must shut down in July unless lawmakers fix the problem. In response, the Senate could debate a bill Monday looking at redistributing part of the state’s annual aid to its 286 school districts. Republicans debating the measure in committee said they found it galling that the court rejected key parts of a law enacted last year that junked the state’s previous per-pupil distribution formula in favor of “block grants” meant to largely freeze spending. Predictable allocations for school districts give the state a stable target as it struggles to balance its budget. The court’s decision, Republicans say, pushes Kansas in the opposite direction — and potentially into new legal challenges every year. “You would never be done with that,” said Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican who wrote the plan. The state spends more than $4 billion a year on public schools. The Senate’s bill would redistribute about $38 million of that money during the 2016-17 school year, cutting funding for 186 districts to increase it for 100 others. In the House, Republicans were so critical of a milder version that a committee chairman dropped it. The Dodge City, Hutchinson, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, districts have pursued the fair-funding lawsuit since 2010. Their attorneys believe legislators need to provide another $163 million to schools to meet the court’s demands — and have asked the justices to say so immediately. Democratic legislators and school superintendents have argued that Kansas would fulfill its constitutional duty to finance a suitable education for every child if lawmakers would cough up more money. “I also don’t think a ‘one size fits all, forever’ solution will work,” said John Robb, a Newton attorney representing the four districts. “It doesn’t in all aspects of life.” Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his allies saw the state’s previous per-pupil formula as deeply flawed, but many educators liked how it automatically adjusted a district’s aid if it gained students or special needs increased. Local school districts impose their own property taxes to supplement their state funds, and under the previous formula, the state gave extra money to poor districts so that they could keep up with their wealthier cousins. The school funding law enacted last year folded those extra dollars into the districts’ grants, which were largely frozen between 2015-16 and 2016-17. Insure with Alliance Insurance Group 2 Blade-Empire, Monday, March 21, 2016 OPINION DOONESBURY® by G.B. Trudeau Concordia Blade-Empire Published daily except Saturday and Sunday by THE BLADE-EMPIRE PUBLISHING COMPANY 510 Washington, Box 309 Concordia, Kansas 66901 Periodical Class Postage paid at Concordia, Kansas 66901 Subscription Rates: By mail, in trade area, Cloud, Republic, Ottawa, Mitchell, Washington, Jewell and Clay Counties, $98.24 one year. Out of trade area, $118.45. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Concordia Blade-Empire, Box 309, Concordia, Kansas 66901. By George Meyer Jacqueline Bigar’s Stars By Jacqueline Bigar Today in History 50 years ago March 21, 1966—Walter Eugene Crayton of Concordia and Sandra Rehnert of Kinsley announced their Feb. 2 wedding, which took place at Danforth Chapel on the K-State campus in Manhattan . . . Breaking ground for Cloud County Community Junior College in Concordia were Sen. Frank Carlson, Gov. William H. Avery, college board members George Ganstrom and Bill Larson and junior college student senate president Craig Saindon. 25 years ago March 21, 1991—Finishing second in the Youth Basketball League Tournament for teams made up of third and fourth graders was V.C. Motors. Team members were Kiley Aggson, Erikka Breault, Julie Christensen, Katie Eubanks, LaRae Naylor, Lori Peltier, Jessica Jensen, DeAnn Bergstrom, Natalie Wellendorf and Kristina Kile. . . . Serving on the set, lights and painting crew for the Concordia High School Drama Department’s presentation of “Voices from High School” were Colleen Brunkow, Vicki Charbonneau, Vince Charbonneau, Jon Detrixhe, Chad Dougherty, Jennifer Dutton, Brandt Hutchinson, Gabe Lloyd, Eve Lloyd, Brandy Longsine, Melissa Miller, Rachel Mills, Amanda Moon, Kari Morrissette, Brian Nelson, Marsha Schmitt, Rich Smith, Shayla Tatro, Bridget Tate, Carl Waggoner, Chris Wagner and the cast. SUDOKU Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contain the same number only once. The difficulty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday. 10 years ago March 21, 2006—Snow had fallen in Concordia and was expected to continue falling through the night. Eight inches had fallen in western Kansas, closing a portion of Interstate 70. . . . Several laptop computers were reported stolen during a break in at the Concordia Middle School. 5 years ago March 21, 2011—Cloud County board of commissioners approved appointing Mrs. Tejal Patel to serve on the Cloud County Tourism Committee. She represented Rodeway Inn and filled the unexpired term ending Dec. 31 created by the resignation of Pat Lynch who had represented Cottage on the River which was no longer operating as a bed and breakfast . . . National Guard Pfc. Robert D. Kearn Jr., of Concordia, had graduated from Basic Combat Training at Fort Sill, Lawton, Okla. 1 year ago March 21, 2015—During the 2015 Match Madness conducted by the Community Foundation for Cloud County 24 of the participating 28 funds received endowed gifts totaling more than $24,900 which were matched by $20,000 from the CFCC for a total of more than $44,850 being added to their respective fund balances . . . Kacey and Michael Roe, Concordia, announced the birth of their identical twin sons, Collin Jeffery and Witten Michael, born Jan. 27, 2015. A baby born today has a Sun in Pisces and a Moon in Virgo. HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, March 21, 2016: This year you often see both sides of an issue. Juggling different concerns also might preoccupy you. Don’t push yourself too hard, and stay focused on daily matters. The more present you are in what you are doing, the happier you will be. If you are single, be cautious. Someone you meet could be much different from how he or she seems. Get to know a potential sweetie well. If you are attached, the two of you flourish the more you take time away from the humdrum of your daily life together. VIRGO has the potential for grumpiness. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) * * * You like to keep an open mind, but you might want to avoid a person who often takes you on a wild goose chase. This individual is close to you, which could make you feel obligated to listen to what he or she has to share. Tonight: Know when to let yourself do what you want. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) * * * * * Your ideals remain high, but make sure a friend is not padding an achievement just to make it more acceptable for your standards. You might want to slow down some and visit a friend. A discussion could arise that highlights your desires. Tonight: Let your hair down. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) * * * * You might be smiling, but you could feel constricted on some level. The pull between your personal and professional life could need an evaluation. Where do you feel the tension most? What do you feel is expected of you? Tonight: Open up a conversation. Share more. CANCER (June 21-July 22) * * * * * You often share your thoughts, but what many people don’t seem to get is that you also are likely to change your opinion. With you, nothing is really written in stone. Opportunities come up that could affect you and your community. Be open. Tonight: All eyes turn to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) * * * You might feel someone else’s energy and decide to join him or her. Avoid taking any risks that could negatively affect your finances. Recognize your limitations, but also be willing to revitalize your schedule and make it more workable. Tonight: Do some spring shopping. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) * * * * You might not realize how alluring you are to another person. What you feel is a direct reflection of your own judgment about yourself. You don’t always have the control you might desire. Tonight: Help someone else to feel less shy. You know how; you have been there. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) * * * * You might feel challenged. Stress from recent events seems to be taking its toll. A friend could open up. You might be surprised by what you hear. Your emotions are likely to overwhelm you, but you’ll choose to keep them to yourself. Tonight: Take some personal time. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) * * * * Others would fret if they found themselves in the same circumstances as you. Your creativity and resilience mark your choices. Once more, these qualities emerge to create smooth sailing in rough waters. Tonight: Speak in different terms to someone who does not “get it.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21) * * * You could feel pressured by someone you look up to. You can’t always evoke the response you desire. Recognize that you might not be getting the whole story from someone you care about. Try being a little more of a cynic. Tonight: Listen to a loved one’s imaginative ideas. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) * * * * * Reach out to someone at a distance. You seem to be quite tired, but you’re full of questions. Talk to someone who knows more about this particular topic than you do. You might want to touch base with a friend who has similar knowledge. Tonight: Detach from your day. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) * * * * Someone you would prefer to have a closer association with will reach out to you. You won’t need to say a lot; just do a good job of listening. Asking questions might be more important than you realize. Tonight: With a favorite person at a favorite place. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) * * * *You might not see eye to eye with someone, but you still will need to make peace with him or her. Look at what is alike in your thinking. Give this person the benefit of the doubt. Think before you hand out any cash. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation only if you like it. BORN TODAY Comedian Rosie O’Donnell (1962), football player Adrian Peterson (1985), painter Hans Hofmann (1880) *** Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. (c) 2016 by King Features Syndicate Inc. *** When nature made the bluebird, she wished to propitiate both the sky and the earth, so she gave him the color of one on his back and the hue of the other on his breast. —John Burroughs *** Thank You for Reading the Blade-Empire New York millionaires ask for higher taxes ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) – A group of more than 40 millionaires in New York state has written to Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo and top lawmakers calling on them to consider raising taxes on the state’s wealthiest residents to help address poverty and rebuild failing infrastructure. The letter, a copy of which was given to The Associated Press, proposes new, higher tax rates for the top 1 percent of earners. The letter goes on to say additional revenue is needed to address child poverty, homelessness and aging bridges, tunnels, waterlines and roads. “As New Yorkers who have contributed to and benefited from the economic vibrancy of our state, we have both the ability and the responsibility to pay our fair share,” the letter states. “We can well afford to pay our current taxes, and we can afford to pay even more.” Those signing the letter include Abigail Disney, Leo Hindery and Steven C. Rockefeller. The tax plan, known as the “one-percent tax plan,” was worked out in conjunction with the Fiscal Policy Institute, a left-leaning economic think tank. “As a businessman and philanthropist and as a citi- zen of New York State, I believe we need to invest in our people and our infrastructure,” Hindery, the managing partner of InterMedia Partners, a media industry private equity fund, said in a statement accompanying the letter. “The one-percent tax plan makes it possible to make these investments, and simply asks people like me to continue to pay a higher tax rate, as we should.” Their proposal faces significant political obstacles in the state Legislature. While the Democratic majority in the Assembly has its own plan to increase taxes on millionaires, the Republicanled Senate opposes the idea. Lawmakers are now negotiating the details of the state budget and hope to have a deal in place by April 1. An existing, lower tax on millionaires is set to expire next year. “Whether it’s income taxes, property taxes, business taxes, user fees, or tolls, we don’t support raising taxes or asking hard-working New Yorkers to dig deeper into their pockets to pay more,” Senate Leader John Flanagan, a Long Island Republican, said last month after Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, a Democrat, released his millionaire tax plan. PEOPLE Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I have been dating "Brad" for three years. We currently date long-distance, but the relationship is fine. He is loving and kind toward me and everyone in our lives. When he proposed, I said yes immediately. But what is supposed to be an exciting time in my life is now marred by his ex-girlfriend, "Marsha." I knew Marsha when she and Brad dated 10 years ago. For some reason, she disliked me, even treating me rudely when she and Brad were invited to parties at my place with my then-boyfriend. Brad confided that Marsha didn't like any of the women he was friends with, saying they were "petty." Marsha is now married, but she and Brad have remained friends. The three of them have even vacationed together. I've never objected to their friendship, but I've also never found a reason to befriend her, nor has she reached out to me. Brad has reiterated Marsha's old accusation of my being "petty" because I am resistant to initiating a friendship. He says that Marsha doesn't remember how rudely she treated me and insists she be invited to our wedding. I disagree. I envision my wedding filled with people who love me. Since I'm paying for half, I should have a say about the guest list. Brad even told me to get counseling in order to find the "real reason" I dislike her. He intimated that I had deep-seated problems and that Marsha was the innocent party. I'm beginning to think wedding bells are not on our horizon. Please help. — To Wed or Not to Wed Dear Wed: There are several things going on here. If you are splitting the costs of the wedding, Brad gets to invite Marsha and her husband. You were wrong to turn that into an ultimatum. It made you seem ungenerous and forced Brad to defend his ex. The way Marsha behaved 10 years ago is old news. She was probably jealous of any women around Brad. You need to stop holding that grudge. People can change, and you won't know if you exclude her. But we also wonder why Brad is so attached to Marsha and demands that you make friends with her. There is no reason for that except that he anticipates including Marsha and her husband in your social life on an ongoing basis. Frankly, if this argument is enough for you to stop the wedding, we think it might be for the best. Dear Annie: I appreciated your answer to "Confused and Torn" about her dog. I have loved and cherished a number of animals in my life. It is always hard to let them go, so I ask myself, "Am I prolonging her life or prolonging her death?" And, "Am I keeping her alive for myself or for her?" The way I see it, the animal does not understand why it suffers. I will clearly understand the loss and take that pain upon myself to keep the animal from suffering more. It is simply the price to pay for all the love and companionship the animal has given me over the years, and is the last and most important thing we can do. — S. Dear S.: Thank you for taking a different perspective on such a difficult time. Senior Citizens Menu Tuesday, March 22—Pork cutlets, au gratin potatoes, yellow squash, cake. Wednesday, March 23— Southern fried chicken, potato salad, beets, fruit; 10 a.m.—Exercise. Thursday, March 24— Meat loaf, baked potatoes, sour cream, green beans, Jell-O® with fruit. Friday, March 25—Good Friday–Tuna casserole, broccoli, fruit and cookies; alt., chicken strips; 10 a.m.—Exercise; progressive cards. Enjoying the ride Card shower Jean Taylor turning 80 Florence “Jean” Taylor will celebrate her 80th birthday on April 7. Her family wish to honor her with a card shower to mark the occasion. Please mail cards to 700 Cloud Street, Apt. 4., Concordia, KS 66901. Sherwin-Williams buying rival Valspar WASHINGTON (AP) – Sherwin-Williams, which has long claimed to “cover the Earth” with its paints, is buying rival Valspar for about $9 billion in a move that it says will expand its reach in Asia and Europe. Sherwin-Williams said Sunday that it is paying $113 a share in cash, a 35 percent premium to the closing price of Valspar’s stock Friday. It valued the deal at $11.3 billion including the assumption of about $2 billion in Valspar debt. The combined company would employ 58,000 people and would have had revenue of $15.6 billion last year. John Morikis, president and CEO of Sherwin-Williams Co., said the deal will enable the companies to save $280 million annually within two years by cutting administrative expenses and raw-material costs. The savings should reach $320 million in the long-run, he said. Last year, just 16 percent of Sherwin-Williams’ sales were from outside the U.S. The Valspar purchase would push that figure to 24 percent, the company said in a presentation to investors. Valspar also sells coatings to packaging companies, and to manufacturers of industrial appliances and heating and air conditioning equipment. Sherwin-Williams will remain headquartered in Cleveland, but said the combined companies will maintain a “significant presence” in Minneapolis, where Valspar Corp. is based. Sherwin-Williams manufacturers and sells paints and coatings under its own name and brand names such as Minwax, Dutch Boy and Thompson’s Water Seal. It operates more than 4,100 of its own stores and sells in big home-improvement chains like Lowe’s and Home Depot. Morikis was just named Sherwin-Williams’ CEO in October, but has been with the company since 1984. The company has had fewer than 10 CEOs since it was founded in 1866. Valspar, which was founded in 1806, makes primers, stains and varnishes that it sells directly to manufacturers of appliances, construction equipment, furniture and other goods. It also sells auto paints under the De Beer and Matrix brands. Sherwin-Williams said it is borrowing funds from Citigroup Global Markets to help finance the deal. The acquisition is subject to antitrust review and is expected to close by the end of the first quarter in 2017. The government sometimes requires companies to sell parts of their businesses as Northwest Missouri preps for 2017 eclipse KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The “Great American Eclipse” – a total eclipse of the sun – is expected to draw thousands of people to northwest Missouri when it darkens the skies in August 2017. Experts say the path of the eclipse will give St. Joseph the best view in the state, going dark for more than 2 minutes. Eclipse enthusiasts are already making plans. Isobel McGowan, owner of Shakespeare Chateau Inn & Gardens in St. Joseph, said her bed and breakfast is already sold out for Sunday, Aug. 20 and Monday, Aug. 21, with one caller coming from Spain, The Kansas City Star reported. “The eclipse community has been salivating over this one for 20 years,” said Dan McGlaun of Indiana, who runs the eclipse2017.org website. “You don’t have to go to Mongolia. And if you live in Kansas City (especially north of the Missouri River) you could potentially watch it in your jammies from your deck.” The last time the Kansas City area saw a total eclipse this close was in 1806 and Don Stolzenburg drives the train full of happy egg hunters at Saturday’s Easter Egg Hunt in Concordia City Park. The event was organized by the Concordia Wesleyan Church. (Blade photo by Deanna Kymer) the next time will be 2205. The “path of totality” will clip northeast Kansas and cut across Missouri, bisecting both Kansas City and the St. Louis area. During the eclipse, St. Joseph will go dark for 2 minutes and 38 seconds, one of the longest times in the nation. Nearby Plattsburg, Lathrop and Lawson will get 8 seconds less. The longest viewing time in the country is 2 minutes, 41 seconds, just south of Carbondale, Illinois. Most of the Kansas City area will see a 99.9 percent eclipse, while Johnson County, Kansas, will get a 99.4 percent eclipse. In 2012, more than 50,000 people visited Queensland, Australia, to see an eclipse. “A lot of people are going to stay in Kansas City and drive up to St. Joe,” said Michael Bakich, senior editor and photo editor of Astronomy Magazine. “It’s a terrific economic opportunity for Kansas City.” Bakich, who ran the planetarium at the Kansas City Museum from 1989 to 1997 and now lives in Milwaukee, is already organizing a free eclipse watch party at St. Joe’s Rosecrans Memorial Airport and has people coming from Florida, Texas, Arizona and Wisconsin. “The (middle of the) path runs right across the approach end of our runway,” airport general manager Abe Forney said. “If you’re into astronomy, this is the spot.” Beth Conway, a spokeswoman for the St. Joseph Convention and Visitors Bureau, said the city will have other watch sites. ___ Blade-Empire, Monday, March 21, 2016 3 Extension Extra Deanna Turner, DEA River Valley Extension District Keys to Embracing Aging The golden years are embraced by some people as they age. Other people remark that they are golden to take away their money to pay for medical expenses. The way in which you take care of yourself through the years, both physically and mentally, affects the natural process of aging. No one knows this better than centenarians, people who are 100 years old and older. Studies demonstrate that life does not diminish with aging. In fact, 100-year-olds show how the acceptance of aging can be positive, joyful, and exciting. They demonstrate that aging brings new experiences, knowledge, wisdom, and a greater ability to engineer a positive approach to the aging process. Many centenarians contribute their longevity to the following keys. Positive Attitude- A cheerful attitude affects overall happiness, health, and well-being. A positive attitude can also help you better manage life’s transitions and challenges. Eating Smart and Healthy- Eating right can help prevent illness and chronic disease. It can also provide you with more energy so you can be alert and a better decisionmaker. Eating healthy includes a well-balance diet and a healthy relationship with food. Physical Activity- Regular exercise is associated with decreased death and disability from diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and cancer. It is also associated with positive psychological benefits, such as improved quality of life. The most important thing to remember about exercise is to do it. Make exercise a habit. Contact one of the District Extension Office today to join the Walk Kansas program that runs April 3rd through May 28th. Brain Activity- A healthy brain is crucial to survival, growth, and everyday successes. Similar to the rest of the body, the brain needs exercise and maintenance to optimize and protect its current and future health. In particular, the brain needs socialization, mental stimulation, physical activity, nutrition, and sleep. Social Activity- Engaged people are often healthier, happier, less depressed, and demonstrate enhanced brain vitality. Being active improves your academic performance, inspires a positive attitude, enhances self-esteem, connects you to family and friends, and reduces risk of disease. Tuning Into the Times- Staying in tune to the times throughout life promotes lifelong learning, which increases knowledge, problem-solving skills, and decision-making. You may not know how to operate technology but be aware of the latest technology and keep up with the news. Safety- Practicing safety is important because it helps keep you out of harm’s way. Know Your Health Numbers- Certain numbers associated with cholesterol, triglycerides, blood pressure, blood sugar, body mass index, and waist circumference can save and extend your life. Stress Management- Appropriate stress is healthy and useful, but when stress overwhelms you, it can cause anxiety, tension, irritability, and health problems. Learning what causes stress and how to manage it in positive ways helps you cope and live a more balanced, healthy life. Financial Affairs- Good financial management is important whether you earn minimum wage or are a millionaire. Sleep- Your body needs sleep to repair muscles, consolidate memories, and regulate hormones and appetite. It has a major impact on your overall health and quality of life. Taking Time for You- Spend some time by yourself even for just 10 minutes a day. It makes you a better family member, friend, co-worker, or caregiver and is good for your mind and body. No magic potion has been discovered to stop the aging process. It is important to take care of your body, mind, and spirit throughout your whole life. Enjoy each day. Follow these keys and other healthy practices for successful aging. Thank You for Reading the Blade-Empire 4 Blade-Empire, Monday, March 21, 2016 ONE PLACE HAS IT ALL THE CLASSIFIEDS For Rent FOR RENT- House, newly decorated, CA, taking applications. 785-827-2333. *$$AVING$! Up to 2 Month$ FREE RENT! 2 BR APTS. Near schools & town, roomy & warm! All electric, Hi-Eff & Kuddly! “Small” pets and kids welcomed. Call Frances or Trent and say “Awesome ‘Possum”. Office 785-8185028 or cell 785-614-1078. FOR RENT Large spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apartments on-site laundry facilities, water and trash paid. Available now. MD Properties 785-534-2070 FOR RENT-Storage spaces, various sizes, reasonable, locally owned. 785-243-4105. Help Wanted THE BLADE-EMPIRE Has Immediate Opening for FULL TIME RECEPTIONIST/ CLERK POSITION Must possess good people and computer skills, be able to multi-task and communicate effectively. Some knowledge of accounting/accounts receivable/accounts payable a plus. Competitive salary and benefits offered. EOE. Send resume to: Blade-Empire P.O. Box 309 Concordia, KS 66901 CNA 2p-10p Full-time Housekeeper We offer benefits. Apply in person, M-F, 8:30-4:30. Mount Joseph Senior Village 1110 W. 11th St. Concordia, KS. EOE 785-243-1347 Wilbur-Ellis in Concordia, KS is seeking a Part-time Seasonal Warehouse Representative Will also stock and retrieve packages & bulk containers, drive forklift & assist w/other warehouse and general housekeeping duties. HS diploma or equivalent. Ability to repetitively bend and lift boxes/ bags up to 80 lbs. Great company, pay and benefits. Please apply online, www.wilburellis.com or send resume/job title/salary requirement to ddefreece@ wilburellis.com. READ THE BLADE-EMPIRE ON-LINE at www.bladeempire.com Full Time Fleet Maintenance Technician Applicant must meet the following criteria: *Have a working knowledge of Fleet Maintenance for Air Brakes, Tire Repair, Annual DOT Requirements * Have own hand Tools * Be able to Travel * Highly Motivated * Safety Oriented Salary will be based off experience. We also offer Quarterly Attendance bonuses, Paid Holidays, p a i d Va c a t i o n D a y s , Life Insurance, AFLAC Supplemental Insurance, Simple IRA, Cell Phone Allowance. Apply in person at 301 Cedar, Concordia, KS or call for application. HELP WANTED Part-time Some weekends required, cashiering, stocking and etc. Pick up an application at: Concordia Town & Country 1516 Lincoln, Concordia Accepting Applications for Full-time Office Manager/Accounting Position Duties include: Accounts Payable and Receivable, general accounting and financial statements, executing contract documents and assisting with bidding projects, project cost tracking and analysis plus various other office management duties. Selfstarter with attention to detail extremely important. Benefits include paid holiday, vacation, health insurance plus yearly bonus. Send resume to: Gerard Tank & Steel, Inc. P.O. Box 513 Concordia, KS 66901 HELP WANTED CNA/CMA for all Shifts Full or part time including every other weekend. Shift differential, paid holidays after probation period. Apply in person, Park Villa 114 S. High St., Clyde, Ks 785-446-2818 Concordia KS Post Office now hiring a Part-time Rural Carrier Associate! Pay is $16.65/hr. Please apply at USPS.com/ employment. Hurry! This job closes on 3/31/2016. CDL DRIVER Champlin Tire Recycling Is hiring for a full time Class A CDL Driver to operate truck with self-loading boom. Sign-on bonus plus eligible for attendance/safety bonuses. Benefits available. Home weekends and most evenings. Apply in person at 301 Cedar, Concordia or call 785-243-3345. EOE. Sales Calendar •Saturday, March 26, 2016– Public Auction at the 4-H Building at the Fair Grounds in Belleville, Kansas. Unique Items and Tools, Household and Collectibles. Republic County Marching Buff Band Auction, Sellers. Novak Bros. & Gieber Auction. •Saturday, April 2, 2016– Public Auction at the farm located 15 miles South of Concordia, Kansas on 81 Highway to Camp Road, 4 miles East to 180 Road and 1 mile South. Tractor, Combine, Equipment, Tools, Collectibles, and Misc. Bill Garrison, Seller. Larry Lagasse Auction. •Monday, April 4, 2016– Land Auction at 10:00 a.m. located at the Haddam City Hall, Haddam Kansas. 240 Acres m/l Grant Township, Washington County, Kansas. Burt Farm & Ranch Realty, LLC, Auction. Upcoming events Tuesday, March 22, 7 p.m., Ada Lutheran Church, Courtland—Andy Bishop, professional trumpet player, will present a concert. Sunday, April 3—Homemade chicken and noodles and lasagna, 11:30a.m.-2 p.m., bazaar items available for purchase, First United Methodist Church, 740 W. 11th, Concordia. Week 10 Senate Highlights The Kansas Senate debated 36 bills this week as the 2016 Regular Session began to wind down. Next week looks for even more significant debate on the Senate floor as the 2016 regular session comes to a close. The legislature as a whole will be adjourned for most of next month and will come back on April 27th to begin the wrap up session, also known as “Veto Session.” Senate Debate HCR 5008-Constitutional Right to Hunt and Fish HCR 5008 would add the right to hunt, fish, and trap to the Kansas constitution. The measure needed to receive 2/3rds majority in the Senate and will now be sent to the citizens of Kansas for a vote. Voters would add the following language to the constitution: “The people have the right to hunt, fish, and trap, including by the use of traditional methods, subject to laws and regulations that promote wildlife conservation and management and that preserve the future of hunting and fishing. Public hunting and fishing shall be a preferred means of managing and controlling wildlife. This section shall not be construed to modify any provision of law relating to trespass, property rights or water resources.” The amendment would add a constitutional safeguard to protect wildlife and promote conservation. Kansas has a rich sporting tradition that has spanned generations. This language will help preserve this heritage for future Kansans and allow the state to continue its conservation efforts. Currently, 19 states have passed a constitutional amendment to protect the right to hunt and fish. Since the Kansas House has already approved the amendment, the measure is now being sent to the Secretary of State’s office for a public vote in November 2016’s General Election. HCR passed with a vote of 36-0. For more information visit: http://li.kliss. loc/li/b2015_16/measures/ hcr5008/ No GITMO detainees in Kansas HCR 5024 urges President Obama to abandon his goal of transferring detained terrorists from Guantanamo Bay to Fort Leavenworth. The concurrent resolution notes that both Fort Leavenworth and the community do not possess the proper law enforcement, emergency response, and resources to hold the detainees. In addition, the transportation of these criminals to the Heartland puts American citizens at risk, damages the local economy, and presents grave impacts toward the state. The resolution passed in the House with a 104-16 vote. In the Senate this week, the resolution passed with 32 voting yea and 7 voting nay. The resolution will now be sent to the White House and the Kansas congressional delegation. Increasing Auto Insurance Liability Limit HB 2446 amends the Kansas Automobile Injury Registrations Act to increase the minimum motor vehicle liability insurance policy limit for property damage from not less than $10,000 to not less than $25,000 for policies issued or renewed on or after January 1, 2017. The existing limits for bodily injury are unchanged with this legislation. The bill passed the Senate 354. Nursing Home Provider Tax Sunset Extension SB 457 increases the maximum annual amount of the quality care assessment and extends the sunset of the Nursing Home Provider Tax. It increases the current quality care assessment from $1,950 to $4,909 per licensed bed. This bill was introduced at the request of the nursing home association and is imperative for the nursing homes to receive federal matching funds. The bill passed the Senate 345. Alzheimer’s Awareness License Plate HB 2473 would authorize an Alzheimer’s disease awareness license plate and authorize those with additional types of distinctive military license plates to purchase decals indicating the owner has received certain military honors. The bill passed the Senate unanimously. Education Funding Ways and Means Committee The Senate Ways and Means Committee held hearings and passed out a proposal designed to address the Kansas Supreme Court’s most recent school finance ruling in Gannon v. Kansas. The legislature’s attorneys attempted to draft a bill – SB512 - that mirrored the details the court put forward in their ruling. Overall, the legislation shifts about 1% of overall state K-12 funding. However, over 100 school districts would see a cut in their education fund- ing due to the redistribution. It was noteworthy that the Kansas Association of School Boards and the state’s leading teachers unions did not oppose the legislation. Thus far, the legislative process has shown a number of ways the court’s remedy could negatively impact education in our state. SB 512 is scheduled for debate on the Senate Floor for Monday morning. The legislation is not expected to be approved, but public debate could be instructive. Pages for Session 2016 – March 17th Lane Martin from Glasco served as a page for the Kansas Senate on Thursday. Lane attended committee meetings, took the Dome tour and ran errands for the Senate during session in the afternoon. Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism A museum housing artifacts from daredevil motorcyclist Evel Knievel will find a home in Kansas this year. The Kansas Department of Wildlife & Tourism, the City of Topeka, and Visit Topeka, Inc. made the announcement and hosted legislators for a sneak preview at the HarleyDavidson store at 21st and Topeka in the capitol city. The Evel Knievel Museum at Historic Harley-Davidson will be the only Evel Knievel museum in the world. The lower level of the building currently houses Yesterday’s Museum where motorcycles and displays change periodically. MUTTS® by Patrick McDonnell ZITS® by Scott and Borgman BABY BLUE® by Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH® by John Rose HAGAR THE HORRIBLE® by Chris Browne Visit Topeka, Inc., expects the new museum will be a tourism draw worth anywhere between three and five million dollars a year. You can find more information about the exhibits at www.historicharley.com and signup for their newsletter for future announcements of the Evel Knievel opening. The phone number to Historic HarleyDavidson is 785-234-6174. As always, I’ll keep you updated on the activities of the Senate while we continue through the second half of the session. I always encourage you to stay informed of the issues under consideration by the Kansas Legislature. Committee schedules, bills, and other helpful information can be easily accessed through the legislature’s website at www.kslegislature.org. You are also able to ‘listen in live’ at this website. The Senate will convene every day this week at 10:00AM. Please do not hesitate to contact me with your thoughts, concerns, and suggestions. An email is the best at this point in the session. Thank you for the honor of serving you! Senator Elaine Bowers Kansas State Capitol Building Room 223-E 300 SW 10th St. Topeka, KS 66612 elaine.bowers@senate. ks.gov 785 296-7389 www.kslegislature.org Blade-Empire Monday, March 21, 2016 5 Sports Villanova advances to Sweet 16, Texas A&M rallies NEW YORK (AP) — Upset in the NCAA Tournament the last couple of years, No. 2 seed Villanova and its seniors made it to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2009 and won’t have to listen to talk of not making it to the second weekend. Syracuse also silenced some doubters, and became one of a half-dozen ACC teams to make it to the round of 16. But the best came in the night contests. Texas A&M roared back from 10 points down in the last 30 seconds to force overtime and won it over Northern Illinois in a second extra period. And Wisconsin nailed a buzzerbeating 3 to survive and advance. A look at those moving on: EAST REGION Notre Dame 76, Stephen F. Austin 75 Rex Plfueger tapped in a miss with 1.5 seconds left and Notre Dame survived a valiant effort by Stephen F. Austin to reach the Sweet 16 for the second consecutive season. With 17.5 seconds left, Notre Dame grabbed an SFA rebound down one and put it in the hands of Demetrius Jackson. The point guard drove to the basket and missed. Zach Auguste followed for the Irish (22-12) but could not convert. The ball slipped off the rim and with one hand Pflueger flipped it in for his only basket of the game. A long heave from Stephen F. Austin (28-6) went wide and Notre Dame celebrated by swarming Pflueger. The Irish advance to play Wisconsin Friday. Thomas Walkup, the hero of Stephen F. Austin’s firstround upset of West Virginia, scored 21. Wisconsin 66, Xavier 63 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Bronson Koenig hit two 3-pointers in the closing seconds, the last of them as the buzzer sounded, and Wisconsin edged Xavier. The talented sharpshooter who failed to hit from beyond the arc in a firstround win over Pittsburgh connected from well beyond the 3-point line to tie it at 63 with 11.7 seconds remaining. Edmond Sumner brought the ball up court for Xavier (28-6), and then drove to the basket, running over the Badgers’ Zak Showalter and getting called for an offensive foul with 4.3 seconds to go. Wisconsin (22-12) called timeout after crossing half court and coach Greg Gard drew up a play for his best outside shooter. Koenig got the inbounds pass in front of his own bench and buried the fallaway shot, sending the jubilant Badgers streaming onto the court and into another Sweet 16. ___ SOUTH REGION Villanova 87, Iowa 68 Josh Hart scored 19 points and second-seeded Villanova advanced to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2009 with a rout of Iowa. Villanova’s senior class, led by Ryan Arcidiacono and Daniel Ochefu, made it to the tournament’s second weekend for the first time. They were upset in the round of 32 the last two seasons and didn’t make it that far as freshmen. The Wildcats (31-5) will meet third-seeded Miami on Thursday in Louisville, Kentucky. There was no doubt in this one. Villanova led 54-29 at halftime and by as many as 34 points in the second half. The closest Iowa (2211) got was 16 points in the final minutes. Maryland73, Hawaii 60 SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Melo Trimble scored 24 points and grabbed eight rebounds as Maryland beat Hawaii. Diamond Stone added 14 points for Maryland (27-8), which advanced to the round of 16 for the eighth time in the past 22 years. Mike Thomas had 19 points and 11 rebounds for Hawaii (28-6), which won a tournament game for the first time this season. Maryland will play Kansas next Thursday. After a sluggish first half in which Maryland led 2827, the tempo picked up in the second. Hawaii went on a 10-4 run to take a 39-36 lead. Then the bottom fell out. ___ MIDWEST REGION Syracuse 75, No. 15 M. Tenn. St. 50 ST. LOUIS (AP) — The insufferable zone of Syracuse ground Middle Tennessee State’s magical March ride to a halt, and the Orange beat the Blue Raiders. Michael Gbinije poured in 23 points, Tyler Lydon added 14 and the Orange (21-13) used a 21-2 charge midway through the second half to crack open a close game and join five other ACC schools in advancing to the third round of the NCAA Tournament. After teetering on the bubble a week ago, they’ll play No. 11 seed Gonzaga on Friday in Chicago. The Blue Raiders (25-10), who shredded so many brackets with their upset of second-seeded Michigan State, made things tough on Syracuse for a while. They led early in the second half and still trailed just 40-39 with 16:02 to go, but proceeded to make one of their next 16 field-goal attempts. ___ WEST REGION Oklahoma 85, VCU 81 OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Buddy Hield scored 19 of his 36 points in the final eight minutes to help Oklahoma hold off VCU. Hield, who didn’t score for more than 10 minutes to start the game, made 9 of 12 shots in the second half after going 2 for 8 in the first. The senior guard posted at least 30 points for the 11th time this season. Jordan Woodard scored 17 points and Isaiah Cousins added 15 for the Sooners (27-7), who advanced to the Sweet 16 for the second straight year. They will play either Northern Illinois or Texas A&M. Melvin Johnson scored 18 of his 23 points in the second half, JeQuan Lewis scored 22 points and Michael Gilmore added 12 for VCU (25-11), which was trying to reach the Sweet 16 for the first time since its Final Four run in 2011. Texas A&M 92, No. 11 N. Iowa 88, 2 OT OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Alex Caruso scored 25 points as Texas A&M overcame a 10-point deficit with less than 30 seconds remaining in regulation to come back for a double-overtime victory over Northern Iowa. The win puts the Aggies (28-8) in the Sweet 16 for the scored on a base hit by Jake Wells in the bottom of the seventh inning, and Cloud County trailed 6-5. The T-Birds scored two runs in the eighth inning to go up 7-6. Garden City battled back in the ninth inning to get the win and complete a four-game sweep of Cloud County. Otto pitched two innings in taking the loss. He gave up three unearned runs on two hits, struck out three and walked three. Brandon Mitchell started for the T -Birds and allowed five runs on five hits, struck out five and walked six in three and two-thirds innings. Jared Winter worked two innings and gave up one run on two hits. He struck out two and walked two. Alex Torkelson gave up just one hit in an inning and a third. He struck out one. Escamilla drove in five runs for the T-Birds. Grady had two hits and scored two runs and Wells had two hits. Garden City hit three home runs in a 17-4 win in the first game of the twin- bill. The Broncbusters went 13 batters to the plate, and scored nine runs in the top of the first inning. Brooks Benson hit a grand slam home run in the inning. A solo home run by Patrick Mixon in the top of the second inning gave the Broncbusters a 10-0 cushion. Cloud County scored three runs in the bottom of the second. Garden City added one run in the fifth inning and six in the top of the sixth. The T -Birds scored a run in the bottom of the sixth. Nick Wordekemper gave up 10 runs on six hits, struck out five and walked six in four innings in suffering the loss. Aaron Starnes and David Johns pitched in relief. Herrera and Grady had two hits each for the T Birds. Garden City defeated Cloud County 11-3 and 13-1 on Saturday. The Broncbusters led 40 through two innings in the first game. Grady doubled home third time in school history, the first since 2007. Danuel House scored all 22 of his points in the second half and overtime, while Jalen Jones finished with 16 for Texas A&M ‚Äî which has now won 10 of its last 11 games. Jeremy Morgan had career highs of 36 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Panthers (23-13), who led 69-59 in the final minute of regulation before committing four turnovers in the final 29 seconds to spark the Aggies comeback. Oregon 69, Saint Joseph’s 64 SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Dillon Brooks scored 25 points to leading Oregon over Saint Joseph’s in the second round of the West Regional. Oregon (29-6) was carrying the banner for the rest of the Pac-12 after the conference posted a collective dud on the opening weekend. Five teams were sent home in the first round and Utah was routed by 11th-seeded Gonzaga in the round of 32, leaving the Ducks as the lone conference representative. And they were tested by the Hawks, rallying from down 58-51 in the final five minutes to advance to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2013. Brooks started the rally with a driving threepoint play and put Oregon in front for good on a 3-pointer with 1:19 remaining. Cope leads CCCC Busters sweep series from T-Birds to win over Allen Bayleigh Cope tossed a four-hitter and drove in four runs to lead the Cloud County Community College softballteam to a 6-1 win over Allen County Community College in the second game of a Jayhawk Conference Eastern Division doubleheader it hosted on Saturday. Cloud County suffered a narrow 5-4 loss to Allen in the first game of the twinbill. Cope gave up just one run on four hits in seven innings in game two. She struck out two and walked one as the Thunderbirds snapped an eight game losing streak. Allen took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first inning. Cloud County answered with two runs in the bottom of the first, and would not trail again. Cope and Bailee Larson singled home runs in the inning. The T-Birds were clinging to the one-run advantage when Cope homered with Larson and Leslie Schuetz aboard in the bottom of the fifth inning to make it 5-1. Lauryn Catron tripled to drive in Samantha Shafer in the sixth inning to give Cloud County a 6-1 cushion. Larson had two hits and scored two runs for the TBirds. Schuetz scored two runs. Cloud County got out to a 4-0 lead on Allen in the second inning in game one.Lexi Duhrkop led off the inning with a home run. Alison Rassette had a tworun double in the inning. Allen County picked up one run in the third inning. The Red Devils tied the game with three runs in the top of the fifth inning.The game was still knotted at 4-4 through seven innings. Allen County scored a run on two singles and an error in the top of the eighth inning, and led 5-4. Cloud County had two runners aboard with two out in the bottom of the eighth when a ground ball ended the game. Duhrkop pitched all eight innings in taking the loss. She gave up five runs, three earned, on nine hits, struck out five and walked one. Larson had three hits for the T-Birds. Duhrkop and Jaycee Worrell had two hits each and Rassette drove in two runs. Cloud County suffered a pair of conference losses to Neosho County Community College on Friday. The T-Birds fell 5-4 in 11 innings in game one and 8-4 in game two. Game one was tied at 1-1 through nine innings. Neosho County put up three runs in the top of the 10th inning. Cloud County responded with three runs in the bottom of the 10th to tie it at 4-4. A run in the top of the 11th inning gave the Panthers a 54 advantage. The T-Birds were retired in order in the bottom of the 11th. Duhrkop allowed four runs, one earned, on eight hits in 11 innings in taking the loss. She struck out four and walked four. Worrell had four hits in the game for Cloud County. Neosho County jumped out to a 4-0 lead in the first inning in game one. Taylor Bolden hit a two-run home run in the inning. Cloud County made it 4-1 with a run in the second inning. Cope homered in the third inning, and the T-Birds trailed 4-2. The Panthers upped the lead to 6-2 with two runs in the top of the fifth inning. Worrell doubled and scored on a single by Schuetz in the bottom of the fifth to make it 5-3. Neosho County added two runs in the top of the seventh inning to go up 8-3. Schuetz singled home Shafer in the bottom of the seventh. Cope allowed eight runs on 14 hits in seven innings, and suffered the loss. She struck out six and walked two. Schuetz had two hits and drove in two runs. Garden City scored three runs in the top of the ninth inning to rally past the Cloud County Community College Thunderbirds in the second game of a Jayhawk Conference Western Division doubleheader Sunday at the Concordia Sports Complex. Cloud County took a 7-6 lead into the final inning. Cole Otto retired the first two batters he faced in the inning. Garden City then used an error, a single, a walk and a double to score three runs to take a 9-7 lead. Cloud County loaded the bases with two out in the bottom of the ninth, but a ground ball ended the game. The T -Birds trailed 1-0 heading into the bottom of the first inning. Bryce Lievens, Alixon Herrera and Jacob Grady singled to lead the bases. Emilio Escamilla hit a grand slam home run to make it 4-1. Garden City reclaimed the lead at 5-4 with four runs in the fourth inning. A run in the top of the sixth inning gave the Broncbusters a 6-4 advantage. Riley Baker singled and two runs as the T -Birds put up three runs in the bottom of the third inning. Garden City picked up one run in the fourth inning, four in the fifth and two in the sixth to make it 11-3. John Badgett took the loss. He allowed five runs, four earned, on four hits, struck out four and walked seven in four innings. Kasey Biddle, Torkelson and Chris Langin pitched in relief. Garden City got out to a 4-0 lead in the second game of the twinbill. Sherwin Salim singled and scored on a double by Wells in the bottom of the third inning, and Cloud County trailed 4-1. The Broncbusters tacked on four runs in the fourth inning, two in the sixth and three in the ninth. Cloud County was shut out over the final six innings. John Stiger took the loss. He gave up seven runs, four earned, on five hits in three innings. He struck out three and walked six. Bryce Girdner and JW Maldaner worked in relief. Holmes scores 18 in 111-98 NCK victory SMITH CENTER — Concordia High School senior Cooper Holmes scored 18 points to help the North Central Kansas team defeat the Mid-Continent League team 111-98 in the Sunflower Shootout all-star basketball game Saturday night at Smith Center High School. The North Central Kansas team led the game 56-40 at halftime. Tyler Popelka, Republic County, led the North Central Kansas team with 19 points. Colson Reames, Beloit, and Kyle McGatlin, Washington County, scored 15 points each. Noah Nelson, Decatur Community finished with 12 points and Regan Kats, Logan, added 11 points. Gavin Overmiller, Smith Center, paced the Mid-Continent League team with 22 points. COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s Tiffany Mitchell found the perfect way to say goodbye to the huge crowd at Colonial Life Arena — with one last stellar showing in the NCAA Tournament. Mitchell scored 16 of her 20 points in the first two quarters to help the top-seeded Gamecocks breeze past No. 9 seed Kansas State 73-47 on Sunday night and reach the Sweet 16 for the fourth time in the past five seasons. Mitchell, a former twotime Southeastern Conference player of the year, powered South Carolina when this season’s league player of the year in A’ja Wilson, picked up two fouls and left the court less than two minutes in. “Our post players are a big part of what we do so when one goes out, we’ve got to pick it up on the defensive end so we can create some offense,” Mitchell said. That’s exactly what Mitchell did. She stepped in front of a Kansas State pass for a breakaway layup moments after Wilson went to the bench — and it seemed like the whole fan base of 10,048 exhaled and began to cheer once more. When Kansas State (1913) tied things at 7-all, Mitchell slipped through three defenders, hit a layup and the following foul shot to complete a three-point play and put South Carolina (33-1) in front to stay. Top-seeded Gamecocks breeze past K-State 6 Blade-Empire, Monday, March 21, 2016 Obituaries HARRIETT L. HUBER Harriett L. Huber, age 87, of Concordia, Kan., died Saturday, March 19, 2016, at Park Villa Nursing Home, Clyde, Kan. She was born Jan. 21, 1929, to Ray and Vera (Montgomery) Simmons at Linn, Kan. Harriett married Lyle Huber on Sept. 1, 1949. She was a Registered Nurse at St. Joseph Hospital for many years. She enjoyed going to the grandchildren’s sports activities and school programs. Her pastimes were tatting, quilting, fishing, playing bingo and going to auctions. Harriett was a member of the American Legion Auxiliary and the VFW Auxiliary. She is survived by four children: Chris (Jim) Workman of Concordia, Kan., Michael (Christine) Huber of Sachse, Texas, Theresa (Mark) Gram of Clyde, Kan.; and Jeff (Becky) Huber of Concordia, Kan.; three brothers: Larry of Elbert, Colo., Norman of Noblesville, Ind., Danny of Kokomo, Ind.; one sister, Diana Roberts of Brownsburg, Ind.; eight grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; two great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband Lyle Aug. 27, 2000; her parents; two brothers, Bob and Deurwent; and two sisters, Maureen and Dewey. Following cremation, memorial services will be at 10 a.m., Thursday, March 24, 2016, at Nutter Mortuary Chapel. Casual dress preferred. Inurnment at Pleasant Hill Cemetery will follow the service. Visitation will be from 2-8 p.m., Tuesday, March 22, at Nutter Mortuary Chapel. The family will receive friends from 6-8 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be given to Park Villa Nursing Home or Meadowlark Hospice. Nutter Mortuary, 116 E. 6th, Concordia, Kan., is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences, please visit nuttermortuary@yahoo.com. Cruz laps Kasich in fundraising WASHINGTON (AP) – John Kasich, Ted Cruz and Donald Trump, the final three Republican candidates running for president, began this month with drastically different campaign fortunes, new fundraising reports show. In one month, Cruz raised what Kasich has collected over the entire course of his longshot bid. Trump, a billionaire, has raised relatively little money as he “selffunds” his effort. On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders outraised Hillary Clinton for the second month in a row. But the Vermont senator still started March with about half as much cash on hand as the former secretary of state. The presidential candidates – current and former – must file their February campaign finance reports to the Federal Election Commission on Sunday, as they look ahead to the next series of nominating contests – in Arizona, Idaho and Utah on Tuesday. What we’ve learned on the money front: ___ KASICH MONEY for winning the nomination outright. Both candidates also benefit from outside groups known as super PACs. Several of Cruz’s boosters reported beginning March with a collective $10 million left to spend. Add to that another donor-led super PAC funded by a $10 million contribution that remained mostly intact. Kasich’s super PAC, New Day for America, reported raising $3.2 million in February and ended the month with $2.5 million cash on hand. ___ TRUMP DIGGING DEEPER INTO HIS POCKETS The billionaire businessman loaned himself another $6.9 million, bringing the total amount he’s loaned to himself to $24.4 million. Trump’s campaign manager has said the candidate has no intention of trying to recoup the money he loans himself. And while Trump continues to boast about self-funding his campaign, he collected about $2 million in new contributions in February, bringing his total raised this STRUGGLES cycle to $9.5 million. Kasich, the Ohio governor, He continues to spend big had about $1.3 million in on private airfare, including available campaign cash as more than $640,000 to his this month began. own airline. And he spent That’s far less than the $8 $3.5 million on placed memillion in cash that Cruz’s dia, including Twitter and campaign had on hand as of Facebook ads. the last day of February, al___ though millions of those dolTRUMP FIGHTERS lars are under lock until the Three billionaires supplied general election. more than 80 percent of the Cruz, a Texas senator, cash last month for a super continued to lap Kasich in political action committee fundraising. His $12 million dedicated to derailing Donald in February roughly equals Trump. The group is called Kasich’s entire campaign Our Principles. haul, dating to last summer. February fundraising reKasich’s home-state win ports show the Ricketts famlast week convinced him to ily – who own the Chicago stay in the race in the hope Cubs and whose patriarch of emerging as a “consen- founded TD Ameritrade – sus candidate” during a gave another $2 million last contested convention this month, adding to their earlier summer. That could be trig- $3 million investment. Paul gered if Trump does not win Singer, a New York hedgeenough delegates in the re- fund billionaire who backed maining primaries. Kasich Rubio, gave $1 million, and has no mathematical path Arkansas investment bank- Have a Great Day ! er Warren Stephens also chipped in $1 million. The group has reported raising $7.8 million since its inception. FEC documents show the group has spent at least $16 million attacking Trump – so far with little impact. The gap between reported income and expenditures means the majority of the donations to Our Principles arrived this month. Those donors will be disclosed next month. Easter bunny has been Weather involved in mall brawl JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) – The Easter bunny has been involved in a mall brawl. A mall Easter bunny and a father got into a scuffle Sunday after the man’s child slipped from a chair while getting her photo taken, Jersey City police said Monday. A video posted on Twitter on Sunday evening shows a chaotic scene at the Newport Centre in Jersey City, New Jersey, near an area set up to take photos with the Easter bunny. City spokeswoman Jennifer Morrill says the father of the 1-year-old verbally and physically attacked the 22-year-old who was playing the role of Easter bunny after the girl slipped. Morrill says both men were taken to a hospital with minor injuries. No charges have been filed as police continue investigating. The video shows a man wearing the body suit of the bunny costume fighting and then being separated by security. A few seconds later, the man in the bunny costume appeared again, throws off his white bunny gloves and exchanges more punches. The mall’s management said in an email to The Associated Press it would have a comment later Monday. Looking Back Today is Monday, March 21, the 81st day of 2016. There are 285 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: •On March 21, 1946, the recently created United Nations Security Council set up temporary headquarters at Hunter College in The Bronx, New York. On this date: •In 1556, Thomas Cranmer, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, was burned at the stake for heresy. •In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany. •In 1804, the French civil code, or the “Code Napoleon” as it was later called, was adopted. •In 1925, Tennessee Gov. Austin Peay signed the Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of the Theory of Evolution in public schools. (Tennessee repealed the law in 1967.) •In 1935, Persia officially changed its name to Iran. •In 1945, during World War II, Allied bombers began four days of raids over Germany. •In 1956, “Marty” won best picture at the Academy Awards; its star, Ernest Borgnine, was named best actor. Anna Magnani (man-YAH’-nee) won best actress for “The Rose Tattoo.” •In 1960, about 70 people were killed in Sharpeville, South Africa, when police fired on black protesters. •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 1976, champion skier Vladimir “Spider” Sabich was shot and killed by his girlfriend, actress-singer Claudine Longet (lohn-ZHAY’), in the home they shared in Aspen, Colorado; Longet, who maintained the shooting was an accident, served 30 days in jail for negligent homicide. •In 1986, Debi Thomas of the United States won the ladies’ title at the World Figure Skating Championships in Geneva, Switzerland, dethroning Katarina Witt of East Germany. •In 1990, Namibia became an independent nation as the former colony marked the end of 75 years of South African rule. Ten years ago: President George W. Bush predicted American forces would remain in Iraq for years and that it would be up to a future president to decide when to bring them all home. But defying critics and plunging polls, Bush declared, “I’m optimistic we’ll succeed.” Sgt. Michael J. Smith, an Army dog handler at Abu Ghraib, was convicted at Fort Meade, Maryland, of abusing prisoners. (Smith was sentenced the next day to 179 days in prison.) 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.” Five years ago: Syrians chanting “No more fear!” held a defiant march after a deadly government crackdown failed to quash three days of mass protests in the southern city of Deraa. Grammy-winning bluesman Pinetop Perkins died in Austin, Texas, at 97. Mayhew “Bo” Foster, a World War II U.S. Army pilot who transported Nazi official Hermann Goering for interrogation in an unarmed, unescorted plane, died in Missoula, Montana, at age 99. One year ago: President Barack Obama, in an interview with The Huffington Post, said he took Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “at his word” for saying an independent Palestinian state would never co-exist with Israel as long as he was in office, yet another sign of the strained relations between longtime allies. A super tide turned France’s famed Mount Saint-Michel into an island and then retreated out of sight, delighting thousands of visitors who had come to see the rare phenomenon. In Meribel, France, Marcel Hirscher of Austria became the first skier to win the men’s World Cup overall title for a fourth straight year. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Kathleen Widdoes is 77. Folk-pop singer/musician Keith Potger (The Seekers) is 75. Actress Marie-Christine Barrault is 72. Singer-musician Rose Stone (Sly and the Family Stone) is 71. Actor Timothy Dalton is 70. Singer Eddie Money is 67. Rock singermusician Roger Hodgson (Supertramp) is 66. Rock musician Conrad Lozano (Los Lobos) is 65. Rhythm-and-blues singer Russell Thompkins Jr. (The Stylistics) is 65. Comedy writer-performer Brad Hall is 58. Actress Sabrina LeBeauf is 58. Actor Gary Oldman is 58. Actor Matthew Broderick is 54. Comedian-talk show host Rosie O’Donnell is 54. Rock musician Jonas “Joker” Berggren (Ace of Base) is 49. Rock MC Maxim (Prodigy) is 49. Rock musician Andrew Copeland (Sister Hazel) is 48. Hip-hop DJ Premier (Gang Starr) is 47. Actress Laura Allen is 42. Rapper-TV personality Kevin Federline is 38. Actor Scott Eastwood is 30. Actor Forrest Wheeler is 12. Thought for Today: “Is it worse to be scared than to be bored, that is the question.” – Gertrude Stein, American writer (1874-1946) Today’s weather artwork by Acacia Kindel, a 3rd grader in Mrs. McFadden’s class Today’s weather artwork by Keltyn Newton, a 1st grader in Mrs. Thompson’s class For the Record Police Dept. Report Damage to property— Allan Jackson, Concordia, reported damage to property at 11:20 a.m., March 19. The damage occurred in the 900 block of Olive. Kolt Ringer, Concordia, reported at 9:20 a.m., March 20, that an unknown vehicle struck and damaged his vehicle sometime during the night while it was parked in the 1800 block of State Street. Rita M. Callaway, Concordia, reported at 9:20 p.m., March 20, that an unknown vehicle had struck and damaged her vehicle sometime during the day. Investigation continues. Markets The major U.S. stock indexes edged mostly higher in afternoon trading Monday. Telecommunications and health care stocks rose, while materials and energy companies lagged. Investors had their eye on the latest string of deal news, as well as a new report showing U.S. home sales slumped last month. KEEPING SCORE: The Dow Jones industrial average rose 12 points, or 0.1 percent, to 17,615 as of 1:13 p.m. Eastern Time. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index was down less than one point to 2,049. The Nasdaq composite added three points, or 0.1 percent, to 4,799. The market is coming off its fifth straight week of gains. HOSPITABLE MOVE: Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide climbed 4 percent after the company agreed to be acquired by rival hotel operator Marriott International. The buyout, which could be contested by China’s Anbang, would create the world’s biggest hotel company. Starwood rose $3.24 to $83.81. Marriott International slipped 90 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $72.26. Traders also sold off shares in hotel operator Wyndham Worldwide. It slumped $4.10, or 5.1 percent, to $76.69. PAINT IT GREEN: Valspar vaulted 24.5 percent after the paint maker agreed to be acquired by competitor Sherwin-Williams for about $9 billion. Valspar gained $20.51 to $104.34. Sherwin slid $13.37, or 4.6 percent, to $275.32. EXECUTIVE SHUFFLE: Valeant Pharmaceuticals jumped 8.7 percent after the company announced a succession plan to replace CEO Michael Pearson. Activist investor Bill Ackman will join the troubled company’s board. The stock added $2.36 to $29.34. HOUSING SLUMP: Shares in most homebuilders fell following a report indicating that sales of previously occupied U.S. homes sank 7.1 percent last month. A limited inventory of homes for sale in many markets has driven home prices higher, reducing affordability and dampening sales. The trend could weigh on homebuilders, many of which rely on buyers who must sell their home before they can purchase a newly built one. Builder Beazer Homs USA was among the biggest decliners. The stock was down 33 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $8.80. LOCAL MARKETS -EAST Wheat ...........................$4.10 Milo ......(per bushel) ....$3.23 Corn .............................$3.17 Soybeans .....................$8.29 CONCORDIA TERMINAL LOADING FACILITY LOCAL MARKETS - WEST Wheat ..........................$4.10 Milo .....(per bushel) .....$3.23 JAMESTOWN MARKETS Wheat ...........................$4.00 Milo ...(per bushel) ........$3.13 Soybeans .....................$8.19 Nusun .........................$14.35
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