We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

High school cheerleaders raise $800 for Rooks Co. Cancer Council

rooks-co-cancer-councilSUBMTTED

Stockton and Plainville high school cheerleading squads came together on December 20 to show support for county residents diagnosed with cancer in a powerful display of cheer squad dance routine excellence and county unity.

Prompted by a desire to do something different for their annual fundraiser to benefit the Rooks County Cancer Council, the Stockton squad decided to reach out to inter-county rival Plainville and team up in order to increase the fundraising potential.

Stockton cheer sponsors Jessica Billinger and Donna Hamilton laid the groundwork for the unified routine. Billinger stated “We wanted to do something to include most of Rooks County. We contacted administrators of both schools and got the event approved. We contacted Cardinal Creations who came up with the design and made the t shirts for the event. We also thought it would be neat to show unity for a great cause. That is when we came up with the idea of performing a routine together at halftime of the Tigers/Cardinals basketball game”.

Mallory Buresh, head cheer coach for Plainville, choreographed the challenging routine. Billinger noted that finding times to practice was difficult due to conflicting schedules and with a group of girls that are active in many activities. The squads were able to practice together only five times before the performance.

The cheerleaders made the most of their short time working together to make the event such a success, while also enjoying the challenge. Madalyn Billinger, Stockton cheerleader, said “I thought it was cool to work with another school to raise money for a great cause. It was also fun to perform with another cheer squad”.

Jasmine Creighton, Plainville cheer squad captain noted that overcoming the novelty of working out a routine with another squad was a little daunting at the start.

“At first we were all skeptical about performing together but as our practices went on we all started to come together and it even became fun! It was such a satisfying feeling when we all hit our stunts perfectly throughout the dance and it was even more satisfying when we all handed money to the cancer council! I hope that this will continue between the two squads because I would love for future members to always have this opportunity” said Creighton.

Buoyed by the success of the difficult routine (cheers went up throughout the gym at its conclusion) and by the amount of money raised, members of both squads expressed the hope that they could continue the event annually to help raise funds for the Rooks County Cancer Council.

The effort raised $800 for Rooks County Cancer Council. The united squads presented the donation to Council volunteer Karen Hageman following their routine during half time of the December 20 Stockton/Plainville boys basketball game.

Rooks County Cancer Council, supported by the Rooks County Healthcare Foundation, uses funds received that are designated by donors to provide fuel vouchers to offset travel costs to treatments and appointments as well as nutritional supplements for qualifying Rooks County residents who have been diagnosed with cancer.

For more information on the Rooks County Cancer Council call (785) 688-4428.

Kansas woman arrested for alleged crowbar attack

Candy

SALINE COUNTY –Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect for drug and battery charges.

Just after 2:30p.m. Christmas Day, police were sent to a home in the 900 block of Gypsum for report of a disturbance, according to Salina Police Captain Mike Sweeney.

James French, 31, called police after Mary A. Canaday, 48, allegedly began hitting him with a crowbar during an argument.

French did have an abrasion on his arm.

Police arrested Canaday for aggravated battery and possession of methamphetamine after officers found a small amount of meth in a pocket.

Star from original "Star Wars" Carrie Fisher dead

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Actress Carrie Fisher, who found enduring fame as Princess Leia in the original “Star Wars,” has died. She was 60.

Fisher’s daughter, Billie Lourd, released a statement through her spokesman saying Fisher died Tuesday just before 9 a.m PST. Lourd said her mother was “loved by the word and she will be missed profoundly.”

Fisher had been hospitalized since Friday when she suffered a medical emergency on board a flight to Los Angeles.

She made her feature film debut opposite Warren Beatty in the 1975 hit “Shampoo” and was also an accomplished author who detailed her experiences with addiction and mental illness in several best-selling books. Besides her daughter, Fisher is survived by her brother, Todd Fisher, and her mother, actress Debbie Reynolds.

Police identify 2 found shot to death in SUV on I-70

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities have identified two people found shot to death in an SUV on Interstate 70 in Kansas City, Kansas.

Police announced Tuesday that the victims were 59-year-old Socorro Olivas and 54-year-old Javier Ambriz, both of Kansas City, Kansas. Police responded to a car wreck along the highway early Saturday found them dead in the SUV from apparent gunshot wounds.

Police say their SUV struck a bridge before stopping in the middle of the highway and that a passenger car then struck the SUV. The driver of the car was taken to a hospital with injuries that weren’t life threatening.

Police say they believe the victims in the SUV were shot by occupants of a third vehicle that left the scene. Police say they haven’t received any credible leads.

Wichita State students provide winter clothes to homeless

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A group of Wichita State University students bought scores of winter clothing sale items and distributed them to the homeless.

The Wichita Eagle reports the students wiped out area Old Navy Stores that were offering micro fleece hats, gloves and scarves for $1. WSU junior Dane Laughlin said he got the idea after seeing an ad for the sale. He posted his plan on a Facebook group of Wichita State Greeks, set up an online account where Greek members could pledge money toward the drive. He soon had enough money to buy 300 $1 items.


The Old Navy stores gave Laughlin an extra 10 percent off and loaded him up with leftover coats.

He and other students handed out the gear on Christmas Eve, with leftovers they’ll distribute later.

“Polka on the Plains” on KAYS will play its last song Friday

Polka on the Plains on 1400 AM/94.3 FM KAYS is ending. The last show will be Friday, December 30, 2016 11 am to noon.

“It has been an honor to host Polka on the Plains. Thank you tuning in. It was a joy to meet the musicians and the listeners. You will still hear me on KAYS weekdays 11 am to 3 pm.” ~Theresa Trapp

If you have questions about this programming change, please contact Todd Lynd, Eagle Radio of Hays General Manager, at 785-301-2211 or 1-800-569-0144.  He’ll be back in the office January 3.

https://www.facebook.com/14KAYS

 

 

********************

 

Albert Holman & The Polkatoons
Blue Notes
YouTube
Charlie Staab
Cindy Stremel
Colorado Polkateers
Country Dutchmen
YouTube:  Country Dutchmen Jamming at Great Bend KS Polkafest Aug 2008
YouTube:  Country Dutchmen of KS play Waltzes at Great Bend KS PF 2008
Frank Flax
Heritage Band
Herman Dinges
Herman Dinges & Cindy Stremel
Herrmanettes
Hot Shots
Facebook
Joe Dolezal
Joe Dolezal with Galen Schmidtberger
John Fritzler
YouTube
Facebook
John Stehle and the Alpine Polkadots
YouTube
Jolly Dutchmen

Jolly Mixers
Karl Meis And The Big Cats
Larry “Opa” Weigel
Lawrence Weigel
Leonard Augustine
Marilyn Imhof & The Dutch Hops
Moonlighters
Munsch-Rohr Old Timers
New Dutchmasters
Original Dutchmasters
Paul Weingardt
Polka Kings
Polka-Nuts
YouTube
Facebook
ReverbNation
Polkaneers
River Boys
Facebook
Rosie’s
Starliter
Wes Windholz
YouTube

Sunflower Chapter of the American Historial Society of Germans from Russia

The Bukovina Society of the Americas

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kansas man fatally shot while exchanging gunfire

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a fatal Monday night shooting in an alley just west of downtown Topeka.

Police say officers found the victim identified as Matthew Lamont Gladney, 28, Topeka, late Monday while responding to a report that two people were exchanging gunfire.

Gladney was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Sheriff investigates Christmas Day standoff at Kansas home

400 Block of Adams in Jetmore-google map

HODGEMAN COUNTY –Law enforcement authorities in Hodgeman County are investigating a Christmas Day case of multiple barricaded subjects with firearms at a residence in Jetmore.

Just after 4p.m. on Sunday Hodgeman County Dispatch received a call from a woman stating she was on the phone with a man that was being held at gunpoint at a residence in the 400 Block of Adams in Jetmore and not able to leave, according to a media release.

When deputies arrived they saw a man behind a vehicle in the front of the residence.

He was identified as the victim in this case. He told deputies he was able to escape the house but another man in the house was armed with an AR-15 and stated he would not be taken alive.

Deputies established a perimeter and ultimately Undersheriff Channell was able to make contact with an individual in the residence by phone and they agreed to come out.

Five individuals eventually came out of the residence and were detained without incident.

No names were released on Monday.

Now That’s Rural: Homegrown football players

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
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

Identifying local talent and helping it to succeed: That’s part of the formula for successful local economic development. It’s also part of the formula for building a successful collegiate football program. Today we’ll learn about some of the in-state talent which is part of the bowl-bound Kansas State University Wildcat football team.

The K-State Wildcats are headed to a seventh consecutive bowl game. As they prepare for the game, it is interesting to look at K-State’s 120-man roster. It includes high profile recruits from around the nation, as one would expect on a power five conference team, but by far the largest number of players on the roster from any state come from Kansas itself. Forty-nine of the 120 players list Kansas as home.

They come from cities small and large. Their hometowns span the alphabet from Atchison to Wamego, and geographically from Kansas City to Ulysses. As one would expect, several come from the Wichita and KC areas.

No doubt some are walk-ons and some are scholarship players. Some are starters and regular contributors. For example, running back Alex Barnes from Pittsburg has been a major factor during Big 12 play in 2016.

Trent Tanking from Holton, population 3,334, has been a force on special teams and as a reserve linebacker. Against TCU he had five tackles in a single game. That was also the game where he intercepted a pass to stop the opponent’s drive in the final minute.

Trey Dishon is a defensive tackle. He has recorded 16 tackles on the season in 2016. Trey was an all-stater at the rural community of Horton, population 1,935.

Speaking of regular contributors, Nick Walsh has been huge for K-State. Nick comes from the rural community of Lyndon, population 1,038 people. He led Lyndon High School to a league championship and a state playoff appearance. He earned all-state honors as both a running back and a punter, but it is in punting where he has made his mark at the collegiate level. In 2014, Nick became the primary punter in just the second game of the season and has not relinquished that position since.

In 2015, Nick averaged 41.2 yards per punt on his way to All Big 12 Honorable Mention accolades. Against Oklahoma State, he averaged 47.5 yards per punt on six attempts.

During 2016, Nick had 45 punts during the regular season. He has increased his season average to 42.8 yards per punt. Against Texas Tech he averaged 50.3 yards per punt on three attempts, one of those a career-best 58 yarder. On the season, eight of those punts have gone 50 yards or more. With such a record, it is no wonder he is on the Ray Guy watch list.

Another contributor is Sean Newlan. At Phillipsburg High School, Sean was a four-year letter-winner and an all-state performer as a junior and senior. An outstanding athlete, he also lettered in basketball and was a state champion hurdler in track and field.

Sean is a defensive back and special teams standout for K-State. In his first year on the field in 2014, he appeared in all 13 games and had six tackles. In 2015, he had 52 tackles and several starts, including post-season.

In fact, he got the starting nod for the Liberty Bowl when K-State played SEC opponent Arkansas. Imagine getting the start at a game where there are more people in the end zone stands than in your entire home county. Of course, that would have been true at Bill Snyder Family Stadium as well.

2016 will mark Sean’s fourth consecutive bowl game as a player. That’s impressive for a young man whose hometown is the rural community of Prairie View, population 138 people. Now, that’s rural.

Identifying local talent and helping it to succeed – that’s a strategy for good economic development and for good football teams as well. In the case of economic development, it means encouraging entrepreneurs. In the case of football teams, it means attracting and developing in-state talent to go with the best of recruits from anywhere. We commend these Kansans for making a difference with home-grown talent.

Rural health care crisis puts critical care out of reach for many Kansans

Ozell Pouncil
Ozell Pouncil

By DEANNA AMBROSE

Ozell Pouncil is a short, black man with a wide smile and snowy white hair that he combs down on his head to spread out the waves. He goes to First Missionary Baptist Church on Sundays and doesn’t use the Internet or a landline telephone.

He worked several blue-collar jobs, but his favorite was farming. Ozell farmed for eight years in Caney, 23 miles southwest of Independence, as his wife, Elizabeth worked at a nursing home. They raised four children, returning to Independence because Elizabeth was, as Ozell says, a “city girl from Albuquerque.”

Ozell had his garden, which served as a compromise, and Elizabeth had a sense of community. As they grew older, the town changed. Industries left, Washington Elementary School closed and the hospital shut down. He said as soon as he can sell his house, he will move anywhere, as long as it isn’t Independence.

“How would you like to live in a town this size, if a heart attack or something or you get a gall bladder eruption or something, you got to take them 20 miles or 45 miles or 100 miles away,” Ozell, 78, said. “You may have to get to the hospital in a hurry, you can’t wait 25, 30 or 45 minutes to get to Bartlesville, which is 45 minutes away, or go to Tulsa which is 100 miles away, or Wichita, which is 119 miles away, everywhere you go it’s a ways away. You could be dead by then.”

Ozell knows firsthand what it’s like for someone to “be dead by then.” On the evening of July 24, 2010, he and his wife Elizabeth sat at the dinner table talking about selling some of Ozell’s golf clubs. Ozell walked into the kitchen to talk with his nephew, and when he returned to the dining room, he found Elizabeth slumped over the table, unresponsive. She had suffered a stroke. He rode in the ambulance to Wichita, praying she would die peacefully and without pain. He couldn’t wish for her to come back as “a vegetable,” as he put it.

“We were married 56 years and renewed our vows twice.”

He told her if she could hang on for another 25 they could have another ceremony. That didn’t happen.

In 2010, Independence’s Mercy Hospital couldn’t provide critical care, like for a stroke, and had limited bed space. But the hospital still served other needs and provided a source of employment in the community.

Independence represents just one hospital and just one town in Kansas, but serves as a possible example for the future of other rural communities. Hospital closings only portray part of the rural health issue. Medicaid expansion and access to primary care both play a role in the overall wellbeing of Kansans and their communities. But the State Legislature and individual communities are trying to find solutions.

In addition to Mercy, 31 other hospitals in Kansas are at risk of closing too, according to the Kansas Hospital Association. This includes Sumner Regional Medical Center in Wellington. A recent 1 percent sales tax increase went into effect in 2015 to support the hospital. The future of Sumner Regional Medical Center might rely completely on the town’s residents.

Independence couldn’t save its hospital. Ozell watched as industries left town and as Mercy Hospital fell deeper into financial problems.

Independence today
Independence has a population of about 9,000 but seems smaller. On a Sunday morning, the streets are quiet: no cars, no people, no dogs, no children. Dirty storefronts that closed years ago line some sidewalks, while others still functioning keep neon open-signs hanging in the window serving as an example of what might be the beginning of the end of small-town life in Independence.

As the population has declined by more than 5 percent since 2010, other changes have come to Independence as well. In 2014, the second most common job in Independence was in health care and social assistance, which accounted for about 22 percent of employment. The highest paid employees in the community were doctors and surgeons, according to Data USA. But in October 2015, that all changed. When Mercy Hospital closed its doors, not only did 190 employees lose their jobs but the community was left without a full-service medical facility.
With the closing of Mercy, Coffeyville Regional Medical Center is the only hospital remaining in Montgomery County. It’s located 25 miles from Independence.

Since August, Mercy has functioned as Independence City Hall headquarters after an outbreak of mold in the original city hall building caused illnesses in some city employees.

Mickey Webb, the Independence city manager, said the city is leasing 10,000 square feet of the hospital to St. John’s Medical Center of Bartlesville, Oklahoma, for MRI imaging and a lab. The emergency helicopter pad remains operational but unused.

Although the helicopter pad works, Webb said, Independence does not hold emergency helicopters in the area. The procedure for moving a trauma patient from Independence to a functioning emergency room involves transporting the patient in an ambulance and stopping at pre-ordained helicopter landing areas on the way.

Labette Health will open an emergency services building in Independence sometime next summer. Labette Health media contact Kerri Beardmore said the new emergency room will feature a helicopter pad. Webb said with the opening of the emergency room, Independence could serve as a more central helicopter hub in the future.
Since 2010, 76 rural hospitals closed nationwide. That is less than 1 percent of the 5,627 registered U.S. hospitals, but 4 percent of 1,855 rural hospitals nationwide. Even with the physical buildings, though, access can remain an issue.

Medicaid expansion
Hospital administrators indicated that Medicaid expansion could have saved Mercy Hospital, whereas Kansas Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer said expanding Medicaid would not provide much help to Kansas rural hospitals. But not all agree. In Wellington, Sumner Regional Medical Center board member Terry Deschaine said expansion would have added about $800,000 to the hospital.

Colyer leads a task force searching for a solution to the rural health care crisis outside of Medicaid expansion. The task force met with groups that work for or in rural health like the Kansas Hospital Association and National Rural Health Association.

“I think Kansans have made it pretty clear, that they’d rather have, that they don’t like big government solutions,” Colyer said.

But, a survey from the Kansas Hospital Association indicates 62 percent of Kansans support Medicaid expansion in some form. In addition, 171,000 Kansans would qualify for expanded Medicaid, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. In a 2014 study conducted by the Urban Institute, the 10-year financial losses of not expanding Medicaid are $5.3 billion from direct expansion and $2.6 billion from hospital reimbursements.

Colyer also linked health care to overall economics of rural communities.

“One thing that the task force is recognizing is that health care has a big economic impact in these communities, and how do we best preserve it or expand it, not just with the services, but with the economic part.”

Health as a profession is related to rural economies. Colyer said on problem facing rural communities is retaining health care professionals. He said training doctors in a rural area during their residencies is a key factor to retaining those professionals in rural communities. He said he’d like to focus on ways to increase opportunities for training in rural areas. He expects the task force report to be available to legislators in January.

University of Kansas Associate Professor Dr. Mugur Geana is the Director of the Center for Excellence in Health Communication to Underserved Populations, and has conducted research in coordination with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. He’s identified access to health care in rural communities as a primary issue.

“When I’m talking about availability of resources, I’m not only talking about having a hospital or a clinic, I’m talking about having doctors, having different specialties available, nurses, and so on and so forth, having transportation means to go to the hospital.”

Geana also said oftentimes communities have plentiful health resources, but still face problems.

“Because access means more than just having a building with doctors in it. It means affordability, you know, it means ease of access in terms of transportation, in terms of language barriers.”

When affordability enters the mix, Medicaid expansion and the lack of it in Kansas become a talking point. Geana said health is often a for-profit industry and even highlighted the importance of competitiveness to the development of health care.

Jeff King, R-Independence and vice president of the state Senate, was against Medicaid expansion until Mercy Hospital closed. Although he is not seeking re-election, King now agrees that Medicaid expansion, done correctly, could benefit Kansans and rural hospitals. He said when the federal government allowed Indiana to create its own form of expansion that he changed his mind on the issue.

The Healthy Indiana Plan provides insurance to adults 19-64 based on income levels and family size. The plan differs from traditional Medicaid expansion in that those insured pay copays for care and prescription. Each month they deposit an amount based on income into a POWER account, a type of health savings account, which the state uses for $2,500 of initial expenses.

King said the money problems and provider problems can’t be separated.

“I’m an attorney; I’m not going to move my family where there are no clients,” he said. “It’s the same for a doctor that it is for a lawyer.”

Primary care
Primary care is another important aspect of rural health that contributes to further declines of health services accessibility. Jason Wesco, Vice President of Community Health Center of South East Kansas, which is a federal nonprofit corporation, said the issues at this point become the corporate influence and cost of health care for residents of Independence, which lacked what he termed good city planning for the hospital.

The Community Health clinic in Independence exemplifies a possible way to cut costs because of the nature of its integrated services. It is located in Four County Mental Health Center, and while serving behavior health issues, also takes on general health issues.

Kansas Secretary of Health and Environment Susan Mosier said integrated care is a hopeful solution to cutting costs while ensuring quality of services, as well as allowing patients to access more services they need in one place. She also said technology she called “telehealth” could cut costs to residents and provide them with additional services.

One example of telehealth at work would be a doctor or nurse practitioner engaging in “telementoring,” which means a licensed professional would assist them via video conferencing or some other form of communication to help train them in behavioral health issues that may arise outside of their immediate experience.

As of now, Community Health Center of Independence has increased its open hours from three days a week to five days a week since the closing of Mercy Hospital in 2015, though Wesco noted other factors could have played into the expanded hours.

He also said 35 percent of the patients the Independence clinic sees are uninsured, and that 90 percent can be described as low-income. Wesco said many of the uninsured would qualify for Medicaid if it were expanded. But access to health insurance isn’t the only problem for rural Kansans.

Without insurance or health care providers, poorer residents suffer from lack of access and extended wait times as clinics close in communities that lack access to health care, Wesco said. He also said eventually that lack of access will probably extend to the middle-income population as well.

The same Medicaid expansion that might have kept Mercy Hospital open, would also provide low-income Kansans with the safety of some form of health insurance in terms of both emergency and primary care. Quality primary care can often reduce the need to go to a hospital anyway, Wesco said.

The Wellington solution
In Wellington, Kansas, another local hospital has faced its share of financial problems. In 2015, 64 percent of residents voted yes to a 1 percent sales tax increase to support Sumner Regional Medical Center. The total sales tax rate now sits at 9 percent, according to the Kansas Department of Revenue.

Terry Deschaine, a board member of Sumner Regional Medical Center, said it’s not uncommon for towns to raise sales taxes in order to keep hospitals afloat.

“It’s not a solution to save hospitals. It’s a solution to help hospitals survive,” he said.

Sales taxes can only go so high, he said, before they start adding up, especially on major purchases, which create a burden for everybody.

He also said Sumner is now working to recruit more physicians since three have either retired or relocated. Although the hospital faced significant financial problems for two years, Deschaine said through good management and recruitment he thinks the hospital will succeed.

He also said that the future for Kansans and Kansas hospitals probably will include Medicaid expansion, because Kansas will see a shift in policy and new faces in legislature after the election.

In the meantime, Ozell Pouncil isn’t going to wait. He’s willing to leave behind a community he has known his entire life to find a place with proper health availability.

“You could always depend on (Mercy Hospital) being there,” he said. “Back when I was a kid, there was always a place to go for safety.”

Deanna Ambrose is a University of Kansas senior from Frankfort, Kansas, majoring in journalism.

Sunny, warmer Tuesday

screen-shot-2016-12-27-at-5-44-22-amToday Sunny, with a high near 50. West wind 5 to 14 mph becoming south in the afternoon.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 24. South wind 6 to 8 mph becoming west northwest after midnight.

WednesdayMostly sunny, with a high near 55. Northwest wind 6 to 16 mph.

Wednesday NightMostly clear, with a low around 25. Blustery, with a northwest wind 13 to 21 mph.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 46. Breezy, with a northwest wind 15 to 20 mph decreasing to 9 to 14 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday Night Clear, with a low around 23.

FridaySunny, with a high near 52.

Kan. teen dies, 2 hospitalized after vehicle hits dead deer, rolls

STAFFORD COUNTY – A Kansas teen died in an accident just before 8:30p.m. on Monday in Stafford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Saturn 2-door passenger vehicle driven by Alexandra M. Wheeler, 18, Haysville, was eastbound on NE 140th Street 12 miles north of St. John.

The vehicle struck a dead deer in the roadway.
The driver lost control of the vehicle. It entered the ditch and rolled several times.

Wheeler was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Minnis Chapel.

Passenger in the Saturn Riley, Allure N. Riley, 17, Larned and Christopher D, Reed, 30, Wichita, were transported to the Great Bend Regional Medical Center.

Riley was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

UPDATE: 4 brief tornadoes in Kansas on Christmas Day

GRAY COUNTY -The Initial survey by the National Weather Service in Dodge City indicated a fourth tornado developed in Kansas on Christmas Day.

The small tornado was on the ground for nearly six miles around 9:45.a.m. It was reported between Ensign in Gray County and Dodge City. The tornado had an estimated peak wind of approximately 70 miles per hour, according to the National Weather Service.

——–

DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — Three tornadoes were reported in Kansas on Christmas Day, causing some damage but no injuries.

The Dodge City office of the National Weather Service says the first tornado was reported six miles southeast of Bucklin Sunday morning, destroying a cattle building.

KAKE reports that 20 minutes later, a horse shed was damaged three miles south of Greensburg.

Another weak tornado touched down later in a farm field southwest of Rush Center in Rush County. No damage was reported from that tornado.

 


Strong winds attached to thunderstorms caused damage to roofs, a grain bin and trees.

No injuries are reported from the storms.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File