SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are asking for help to locate a missing Salina man.
Sheriff’s Captain Roger Soldan said 51-year-old Jerry Huston who is a truck driver, was last heard from by his employer just after 12:30p.m. on Monday.
Huston called to say he was stopping in McPherson to take care of some personal business.
When had not been heard from later, McPherson Police were contacted, and they found Huston’s truck Tuesday afternoon in the parking lot of the hospital.
All of his personal belongings were inside the truck and he had not been inside the hospital as a patient or visitor, according to Soldan.
His family has not heard from him either.
Huston is 6-foot tall, weighs 290 pounds and has brown hair and hazel eyes.
If you have any information on the whereabouts of Jerry Huston, you are asked to call the Saline County Sheriff’s Office at 785-826-6500, or contact the nearest law enforcement agency.
LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press
JULIE PACE, Associated Press
President Obama made the announcement on Thursday from the Roosevelt Room at the White House
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says his plan to keep more troops in Afghanistan than previously planned offers the best chance for long-term success.
Obama says the security situation in Afghanistan is still very fragile. He says in some cases there are risks of deterioration.
Obama is unveiling a new plan for the U.S. to keep 5,500 troops in Afghanistan when he leaves office in 2017. The shift retreats from his promise to end the war there during his tenure.
The president says the Afghan military has made gains but is still not as strong as it needs to be.
Obama says U.S. troops’ mission in Afghanistan won’t change. He says they’ll focus on counterterrorism and training Afghan troops.
I’ve written at least 75 columns on gun control over the years. It might have been as many as 100.
Every time some demented loser would haul a gun — usually some sort of automatic — into a public place and lay waste around him (it’s always a him), I would get on my soapbox and excoriate the National Rifle Association, gun dealers, and our cowardly politicians for letting this outrage go on unchecked.
And do you know what came of it? Nothing. Unless you count the fact that gun sales always spiked.
One of the last columns — a response to the Sandy Hook school massacre — came to the attention of Fox News viewers and gun enthusiasts across the nation. Their obsession fully metastasized, producing an avalanche of email. Two readers said they were reporting me to the FBI. And that was some of the friendlier fare.
Worse were the telephone calls, particularly the ones at midnight featuring a low voice telling me he knew where I lived. (That might not be a death threat exactly, but it wasn’t an invitation to exchange Christmas cards either.)
After one more column on the failure of Congress to take action after Newtown, I decided to stop writing about guns. It was going get me killed. And anyway, what good did it do?
Besides, this isn’t a gun problem — it’s a mental health problem, right? Surely that explains what happened at Virginia Tech and Columbine and in Aurora, Charleston, Tucson… Oh, who can keep track?
Then, a student at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon gunned down nine people before fatally shooting himself. And the politicians came out with the same sad lying faces and made the same sad lying speeches, and I knew I had to write another column about guns.
Two more students, at Texas Southern University and Northern Arizona University, have been killed since then in yet more shootings. Ye gods! Will the carnage ever cease? There’s no country in the developed world that kills as many of its own people as we do. Surely we can’t be the only rich country that’s grappling with mental illness.
The argument that good people will have to arm themselves against the crazed monsters among us is superficially attractive. Who among us hasn’t channeled his or her inner Clint Eastwood and dreamed of stopping a mass murderer in his tracks with a well-aimed bullet?
But reality isn’t like that. Even police officers confronted by armed assailants shoot and shoot until their guns are empty, seldom hitting the target. Good marksmanship is hard when you’re terrified.
The chances that you, an untrained shooting range wizard, can prevail against an insane guy with an assault weapon are less than nil.
The real culprits in this fiasco are our Founders, who wrote the Second Amendment. It’s a sloppy and ungainly piece of work, even for a government document.
The wording is almost perfectly ambiguous. The amendment’s claim that “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed” would seem to indicate that the gun lobby is on solid ground to resist all laws dealing with firearm ownership.
But the Founders introduce that thought only after stating that “a well-regulated Militia” is “necessary to the security of a free State.”
The truth is, it’s not, not any longer. They were envisioning a state without a substantial standing army, which they feared. It was a conjured-up notion of a country of minutemen ready to run out of the door and defend their nation with muzzle-loading rifles.
In case you haven’t heard, we’ve got a standing army. And the Pentagon’s “arms” are way more destructive than anything our Founders could conceive of.
In other words, the Second Amendment is an 18th century relic with little relevance to contemporary reality. We should change it or get rid of it altogether.
Please don’t call the house. It makes my wife nervous.
OtherWords.org columnist Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Beth Pfeifer, ARC of Central Plains, accepts the Community Support Award from Jerry Michaud, DSNWK President.
DSNWK
Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas hosted its annual awards luncheon in Hays on September 29. Awards were given throughout the afternoon to staff, persons served, and community members.
The first awards of the afternoon were given to employees of DSNWK for their years of service. Those staff recognized and listed by location, were:
Atwood – Amber Barnett, Karen Focke, Betty Hafer, Roger Prideaux, Martina Urban, Barbara Wolters
Hays – Kathyrn Beckley, Robert Begler, Charmane Besperat, Derek Crabtree, Matthew Detherage, Terri Farrington, Amber Farrell, Anna Findley, Connie Fross, Sandra Garner, Jeremy Goodale, Connie Hendrix, Jenna Jacobs, Abu Kaba, LeAnne Kroeger, Tammy Lawson, Edward Olden, Janet Pfanenstiel, Jeff Saindon, Leah Schlyer, Linda Schoenthaler
Hill City – Deena Newell, Vincent Walker
Russell – Sheila Bosch, Tamara Lynch, Julie Quakenbush
Stockton – Ann Forell
DSNWK gave special recognition to six staff members who made successful efforts in coming to the aid of persons served by DSNWK in need and providing emergency assistance. Those recognized were: Jesse Babcock of Hill City, Bri Robinson of Hays, Dawn Rose of Russell, Kelsey Obermiller and Maria Tipton and Jessica Zink of Norton. Special recognition was also paid to one staff member for their outstanding work with persons with disabilities. Jeannie Komarek of Hays was presented with the Employee of the Year Award.
Two $100 scholarship awards were presented to Rikki Krejci of Russell and Mary Wise of Stockton. These awards were given from the Jerelyn Becker Memorial Scholarship Fund for employees studying in higher education in a field related to serving people with developmental disabilities.
Several awards were given to individuals served by DSNWK for achievement through employment and independence. Those receiving awards and listed by location were:
Atwood – Janey Engleman, J. Lynn Lohoefener
Ellis – Homer Edwards
Hays – Jessica Boeckner, Marie Brier, Kacey Dannels, Jackie Hashenberger, Bobby Heard, Shad Jay, Judy Leiker, Nicholas Leis, Raylynn Lumpkin, Ramona Schmitt, Asia Schonthaler
Hill City – Gerald Hasenbank
Russell – Glen Geschwentner, Steven Madsen, Orrin Stephenson
Three individuals served by DSNWK received their Improvement Awards. This award recognizes individuals served by DSNWK who has demonstrated greater independence by moving to a less restrictive living environment. Jenny Cronn, Val Stradal and Sabrina Young of Hill City received the awards.
DSNWK presented two Individual Achievement Awards to individuals served by DSNWK. Lakin Eckroat of Hays and Joe Newton of Russell were presented these awards which go each year to one youth and one adult who have shown tremendous individual progress throughout the year. Chris Beckman of Oakley was presented with one of DSNWK’s Good Neighbor Awards for his community volunteer efforts. Annette Norman of Hays was presented with DSNWK’s Fitness Award for her dedication to exercising, losing weight and living a healthy lifestyle.
Several awards were presented to members of area communities during the afternoon. They were: Graham County EMS of Hill City, who received DSNWK’s Employer of the Year Award for their outstanding support of people with disabilities in the workforce. The Community Support Award was presented to both the ARC of Central Plains and TMP-Marian High School of Hays for the outstanding support that they display to the individuals that DSNWK serves through their Christmas project. Finally, DSNWK’s second Good Neighbor Award was presented to Phyllis Strecker of Hays who has shown outstanding support to an individual served by DSNWK.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas may have to pay $42 million to a former Pizza Hut franchise operation owner over his challenge of a tax bill.
The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Gene Bicknell has battled the state since Kansas said he owed $42 million based on his 2006 sale of NPC International, which has hundreds of Pizza Hut franchises.
The Kansas Court of Tax Appeals determined Bicknell was a Kansas resident and owed the money. Bicknell says he was living in Florida, but paid the $42 million and appealed.
The Kansas Court of Appeals said recently the tax appeals court ignored state regulations, sending the case back to the tax appeals court.
A $42-million state payout could affect the state’s finances because the state’s taken in about $42 million less in revenue than expected.
Charles C. Haynes is director of the Religious Freedom Center of the Newseum Institute.
Battles this month over holidays in public schools — from Halloween in Connecticut to Christmas in Indiana — are about far more than witches, ghosts, Santa Claus, or Jesus.
What’s really at stake for people on all sides are emotional questions such as “whose schools are these?” and “what kind of nation are we — will we become?”
As the United States grows increasingly diverse, our perennial holiday fights turn public schools into a microcosm of the public square, places where we debate and define what it means to be “American” across differences that are often deep and abiding.
Consider the angry backlash earlier this month when school officials in Milford, Connecticut banned the traditional Halloween parade and other activities in Milford’s elementary schools.
With growing numbers of families opting out for religious or cultural reasons, the district decided the time had come to axe the holiday. “School-day activities must be inclusive,” explained administrators in a letter sent home to parents.
The keep-Halloween crowd sprang into action. Halloween, it turns out, is one of those “growing up in America” traditions — like Thanksgiving and Christmas — that some people insist be celebrated in schools.
“These are our American customs and traditions,” argued the parent who organized the petition drive to save Halloween, “and we should not give them up because others find them offensive!”
After hundreds of parents signed the petition, the Milford school district backed down and re-instated Halloween celebrations at the schools.
Halloween may have survived this year in Milford, but the trend in many other school districts is to substitute “fall festivals” for Halloween or at least dial back the Halloween parties, lessons, parades and art — which can last for weeks in some schools.
Despite the religious objections of some Christians, Muslims and others, Halloween isn’t a First Amendment issue because the holiday as celebrated in schools is purely secular with no direct connection to the complicated religious origins of the holiday in distant history.
That means schools may, if they so choose, waste all the time they want to on secular Halloween celebrations without violating the Establishment clause — as long as they are careful to uphold the Free Exercise clause by excusing children with religious objections.
But even though Halloween parties are legal, many school officials have decided — probably wisely — that this is not the culture-war molehill they want to die on. After all, why keep doing something with so little educational merit that upsets so many parents?
Christmas, however, is a more challenging holiday dilemma. School activities in December not only stir debates about preserving “American traditions,” they implicate the First Amendment.
Last week, the ACLU and Freedom From Religion Foundation filed suit on behalf of a student and his father who object to the annual “Christmas Spectacular” program at the high school in Elkhart, Indiana.
Most of the program performed by students each year would appear to be legally unobjectionable with a variety of seasonal music, religious and secular. But the event always ends with a 20-minute re-enactment of the birth of Jesus — a live Nativity scene complete with scriptural readings and sacred music.
Most people in Elkhart — including the entire school board — want to fight to keep the Nativity pageant, arguing that it is a time-honored American tradition that reflects the beliefs and values of the majority.
But religious freedom in America, which requires that government not take sides in religion, is not up for a vote.
Under the First Amendment, school officials may not turn the local school into the local church in December or at any other time of year.
A re-enactment of the birth of Jesus — a sacred event for Christians — belongs in houses of worship where believers voluntarily come together to practice their faith. It does not belong in a public school where there is a captive audience of impressionable young people.
Of course, public school programs may include religion — what would a music curriculum be without any sacred music? Following First Amendment guidelines, religion may be included in school programs if, and only if, the purpose is educational and not devotional.
The job of public schools is to not to celebrate religious holidays, but to teach students about Christianity and other religions in history, literature, art, and music or wherever in the curriculum study about religions is necessary for a good education.
In a changing America, getting holidays right in public schools isn’t easy. The current conflicts in school districts like Milford and Elkhart are reminders that Americans are no longer united — if we ever were — by Halloween parades or Nativity pageants.
But if we care about our life together as American citizens, we should be united by a shared commitment to the principles of religious freedom that ensure fairness and respect for people of all faiths and beliefs.
Beyond our diverse holidays and customs, that’s what it truly means to be an American.
Charles C. Haynes is vice president of the Washington-based Newseum Institute and executive director of the Religious Freedom Center. [email protected]
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is opening an office that will seek to prevent sexual violence on campus.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports the new KU Sexual Assault Prevention and Education Center will coordinate the university’s sexual assault prevention and education programming.
The university announced the new office Wednesday.
The center is expected to cost about $200,000, which includes salaries and benefits for four employees. University spokesman Joe Monaco says the university is not receiving any new funding for the center.
The center will be in addition to the university’s Office of Institutional Opportunity and Access, which investigates reports of sexual violence and other discrimination on campus, and recommends disciplinary action.
DETROIT (AP) — Kia is recalling more than 377,000 Sorento SUVs because the transmission can be shifted out of park when the driver’s foot isn’t on the brake.
The recall covers Sorentos from the 2011 through 2013 model years. Kia says in documents filed with U.S. safety regulators that the cars can roll away unexpectedly. The problem happens when the gear shift lever is pushed too hard, causing a part in the shifter to crack. It has caused three injuries.
Kia says it began investigating the trouble in August when it got a letter from a lawyer saying that a child moved a Sorento shift lever out of park and the SUV rolled, causing an injury.
Dealers will replace the brake-shift interlock mechanism with improved parts. Owners will be notified starting Nov. 24.
Agnes M. Suppes, 94, formerly of Loretto, Kansas, died Friday, October 9, 2015 at the Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado.
She was born August 10, 1921 in Loretto the daughter of John G. and Josephine (Burghart) Urban.
On November 10, 1941 she married Anton J. “Tony” Suppes in Loretto. He died May 25, 2011.
She was a farmwife and homemaker and worked at Travenol for 15 years. She was a former member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Loretto, St. Joseph Catholic Church in Liebenthal, and was a member of the Daughters of Isabella in Victoria, KS. She was very family oriented, loving and quiet, and was a gifted seamstress who made all of her children’s clothes. She loved to help on the farm, especially at harvest times.
She was a loving wife, mother, and grandmother who loved when her children and grandchildren would come to visit the farm.
Survivors include three sons; Terry Suppes and wife Pam of Loveland, CO, Ivan Suppes of Otis, KS, and Galen Suppes and wife Kim of Columbia, MO, two daughters; Carol Myers of Fort Collins, CO, and Sheila Brackett and husband Jim of Colorado Springs, CO, a daughter in law Annabel Suppes of Windsor, CO, seventeen grandchildren, twenty one great grandchildren, and three great great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, a son Duane Suppes, a brother Hubert Urban, and a sister Helen Sacks.
Funeral services will be at 11:00 am on Monday, October 19, 2015 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Loretto. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Visitation will be from 6:00 until 8:00 pm on Sunday and from 9:30 am until 10:30 Monday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street. A Victoria Daughters of Isabella rosary will be at 6:30 followed by a parish vigil service at 7:00 pm, both on Sunday at the funeral home.
Memorials are suggested to the St. Mary’s Shrine of Loretto, in care of the funeral home.
Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.
Local hotspot Gella’s Diner and Lb. Brewing, 117 E. 11th, has been recognized once again on a national scale, having been listed on MSN.com as the best unknown brewery in Kansas. The list ranks the best brewery in each state that is relatively unknown on a national scale.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
By RON WILSON Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development
The World Series. It’s a great event for baseball fans. As the baseball season comes to its culmination, we are reminded of a time before racial integration when there were two World Series: One for major league baseball, and a second for what was called the National Negro League. Today we’ll learn about two young players who led their teams in each league. Incredibly, those two players both came from the very same small town in rural Kansas. Thanks to Meredith Wiggins of the Kansas Humanities Council whose article served as our source and is used with permission in today’s Kansas Profile.
Walter “Big Train” Johnson was an icon in big league pitching a century ago, playing for 21 years with the Washingon Senators. He was the dominant power pitcher of his time, described as “one of the most celebrated and dominating players in baseball history.” Several of his pitching records still stand today, more than a century later.
Walter was well-known to have come from a farm near Humboldt, Kansas. What is less well-known is that another major league player also came from Humboldt during that same time. He was an African-American named George Sweatt who made his mark in the Negro Leagues.
George Sweatt grew up at Humboldt. He attended Pittsburg State where he was a decorated track and field athlete. He pursued baseball and made it to the Negro Leagues where he played with the famous Kansas City Monarchs and later with the Chicago American Giants.
Sweatt, sometimes called “Sharkey” or “The Teacher,” was a combination infielder and outfielder known for his wicked hitting. However, he and Walter Johnson were also both known for their sportsmanship. Johnson had a terrifying pitching arm, but he was remembered for his polite disposition. He was even known to throw easier pitches to opposing players with low batting averages.
George Sweatt was also remembered for his good sportsmanship. He was actually a schoolteacher in Coffeyville. If the baseball season overlapped with his teaching duties, there was no question which he would pick, according to Negro League baseball historian and author Phil Dixon. “Sweatt was kind of an academic and a ballplayer,” Dixon said. “He….would leave the team early enough so he could go teach. He was a tremendous individual.”
Walter Johnson had a lengthy big league career. In his 18th year with the Washington Senators, he led his team to the World Series championship in 1924. In that same year, the Negro League World Series was won by the Kansas City Monarchs, including George Sweatt.
What are the odds that two ballplayers from the same small Kansas town would lead their teams to World Series championships in the very same year? The citizens of Humboldt should be proud – and they are.
The community is “pleased as punch” to share the two men’s stories with a wider audience, said Humboldt Historic Preservation Alliance mentor Eileen Robertson. Humboldt set up a local baseball Hall of Fame with a display featuring photos, articles, and memorabilia associated with the two men. Today, town teams play at both Walter Johnson Field and at Sweatt Field. Monuments to both men stand at various locations throughout town.
While Walter Johnson has been famous for decades, the town is taking steps to publicize George Sweatt’s rich history in the area as well. A plaque marking his birthplace is planned. This is fitting recognition for a man whose autobiography includes a dedication to “the older citizens of Humboldt, Kansas for accepting me for what I was and have become.”
Humboldt is even hosting the Hometown Teams Smithsonian Institution traveling exhibition this fall. For more information, go to www.humboldtkansas.org.
It is incredible that two World Series champions in the same year would come from a single rural community – the town of Humboldt, Kansas, population 1,964 people. Now, that’s rural.
The World Series. It’s a great event for baseball fans, and today we remember two World Series champions who came from the same small Kansas town. We salute the Humboldt Historic Preservation Alliance for making a difference by preserving and promoting this history. I think they’ve hit a home run.
GREELEY, Colo. (AP) — The two people that died onboard a small plane that crashed in a field in Weld County have been identified as leaders of a Kansas church.
The Greeley Tribune reports the pilot has been identified as 35-year-old Jared Langston of Holyrood, Kansas, and the passenger as 41-year-old Benjamin Bates, of Lyons, Kansas. Both men were pronounced dead at the scene around noon Tuesday after their Beechcraft 35 Bonanza went down near Greeley.
Bates served as bishop of the Great Bend Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Langston was the Elders Quorum president and Young Men president, according to church officials.
A spokesman for the National Transportation Safety Board says investigators are examining the wreckage.