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Trump extends China tariff deadline, cites progress in talks

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Sunday he will extend a deadline to escalate tariffs on Chinese imports, citing “substantial progress” in weekend talks between the two countries.

Trump tweeted that there had been “productive talks” on some of the difficult issues dividing the U.S. and China, adding that “I will be delaying the U.S. increase in tariffs now scheduled for March 1.”

Trump said that if negotiations progress, he will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping at his Florida resort to finalize an agreement.

U.S. and Chinese negotiators met through the weekend as they seek to resolve a trade war that’s rattled financial markets.

Trump had warned he would escalate the tariffs he has imposed on $200 billion in Chinese imports, from 10 to 25 percent, if the two sides failed to reach a deal. The increase was scheduled to take effect at 12:01 a.m. EST on March 2.

Speaking to governors gathered at the White House for an annual black-tie ball Sunday, Trump said he was doing “very well” with China.

“If all works well we’re going to have some very big news over the next week or two,” he said, though he took care to add that “we still have a little ways to go.”

Asian stock markets rose following Trump’s announcement, but gains were modest. Share prices already had risen in recent weeks in expectation Trump would postpone the tariff hike.

The Shanghai Composite Index rose 2.4 percent while Tokyo’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index gained 0.7 percent.

The world’s two biggest economies have been locked in a conflict over U.S. allegations that China steals technology and forces foreign companies to hand over trade secrets in an aggressive push to challenge American technological dominance.

The two countries have slapped import taxes on hundreds of billions of dollars of each other’s goods. The conflict has unnerved investors and clouded the outlook for the global economy, putting pressure on Trump and Xi to reach a deal.

Chinese negotiators said the talks made progress on technology transfer, protection of intellectual property rights and non-tariff barriers, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. It cautioned there are “still some differences that need more time to be ironed out.”

“Trump clearly wants a deal and so do the Chinese, which certainly raises the probability that the two sides will come to some sort of negotiated agreement, even if it is a partial one, in the coming weeks,” said Cornell University economist Eswar Prasad, former head of the International Monetary Fund’s China division.

On Twitter, Trump said the two sides had made headway on issues including protection of trade secrets, forced technology transfer and U.S. agricultural sales to China. But the administration did not immediately provide details.

Business groups and lawmakers in Congress want to see a comprehensive deal that forces the Chinese to change their behavior and that can be enforced. The U.S. has accused China of failing to meet past commitments to reform its economic policies.

“Encouraging news from @POTUS that progress is being made in a trade deal with China. Hopefully this leads to an agreement that stops China’s theft of US intellectual property and avoids a full blown trade war,” tweeted Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania

But critics worry the president has given up leverage.

“They now have lost the advantage of a deadline,” said Philip Levy, a senior fellow at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and a White House economist under President George W. Bush. “I see the odds tilting” in China’s favor, Levy said.

Palco students serve as statehouse pages

OFFICE OF SEN. BOWERS

TOPEKA – Braden Acheson, Mercedes Kahn, Kyler Martin, and Miriam Towns of Palco served as pages for Senator Elaine Bowers in the Kansas Senate on February 18, 2019.

Pictured here with Governor Kelly and Senator Bowers, they spent the day taking a Dome Tour, attending committee meetings and running errands for the Kansas Senate.

Martina Viola Farrington

Martina Viola Farrington, 99, passed away on February 23, 2019 at the Cedar Village Care Center in Ness City, Kansas. She was born on May 27, 1919 in Munjor, Kansas the daughter of Alex and Margaret (Pfannenstiel) Leiker.

She was a day care provider while she was living in California. After Martina moved to Ness City she became a member of the Sacred Heart Church and Altar Society. She married Marvin W. Farrington in Detroit, Michigan. He died on July 4, 1982.

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Marvin W Farrington; sisters, Mary Vogel, Ida Vogel, Lydia Leiker, Gete Simpson, Bertha Pfiefer, Coletta Luetters, Irene Leiker; and brothers, Edmund, Blackie, Richard, Robert Dean, and Al Leiker.

Rosary will be on Tuesday, February 26, 2019, 10:30 A.M. at the Sacred Heart Church, Ness City followed by Mass of Christian Burial at 11:00 A.M. Burial will be in the Sacred Heart Cemetery, Ness City.

Friends may call at Fitzgerald Funeral Home on Monday, February 25, 2019 from 9:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. with the family present, from 7:00 to 8:00 P.M.

Memorial contributions may be given to the Sacred Heart Church or Sacred Heart Cemetery.

Ernest Edward Poe

Ernest Edward Poe, age 90, went home to be with his Lord and Savior February 22, 2019 at Greeley County Hospital in Tribune, KS.

Ernest (Ernie) Poe was born on October 29th, 1928 on the Poe homestead in Weldona, Colorado. He was the youngest child of Ernest and Lola Mae Poe. He grew up in Weldona and graduated high school in 1946.

Ernest married Marjorie Wacker January 1, 1950 in Fort Morgan, Colorado. Through the years, Ernest worked as a farmer and rancher moving from Colorado to Healy, KS in 1958. It was while working as a partner on the Maddox Ranch in Healy that Ernie began his fine barbed wire collection.

He moved with his family to Wallace County in 1970 to continue farming and ranching while also selling grain bins and seed. Ernest later owned Poe Building Systems and installed many buildings and grain storage systems across the area.

Ernest was a member of the American Baptist Churches. He served the American Baptist Men’s Central Region as President for several years. Ernest was involved in the community in many ways and served as Mayor of Sharon Springs for 8 years. He enjoyed volunteering, especially his time working with and providing horses for Camp Christy and helping at the Fort Wallace Museum.

In his retirement, he expanded his barbed wire adventures by creating barbed wire sculptures. Ernest made anything from small birds that are treasured by all of his grand-children and great-grandchildren to life size horses. His greatest creation is the buffalo that stands proud in front of the Fort Wallace Museum. Ernie loved roping, spending time with family, and visiting with friends.

Preceding him in death are his parents, brothers Reverend Harry Poe, John Poe, and P.A. Poe and sisters Reverend Margaret Poe and Francis Faires-Cross.

He is lovingly remembered by his wife Marjorie Poe of Sharon Springs; Sister Minnie Mae Gardner of Denver; Son Edward (Valerie) Poe of Sharon Springs, Son Kenneth (Becky) Poe of Sharon Springs, Daughter Linda (Greg) See of Leoti; 8 grandchildren; and 16 great-grandchildren.

Click HERE for service details.

LeRoy Kreutzer

LeRoy Kreutzer, 69, Hays, died Saturday, February 23, 2019 at HaysMed.

He was born May 1, 1949 in Hays the youngest child of Isidor and Lidwina (Younker) Kreutzer. On June 22, 1968 he was united in marriage to Sandra “Sandy” Linenberger in Denver, Colorado. LeRoy was the Mechanic Supervisor for the City of Hays Service Division for 26 years, retiring in 2015. He then became the maintenance man for Cedar View/Homestead of Hays for three years. He was a member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, and was a Boy Scout Leader of Troop #113, and a little league baseball and soccer coach. He was a Kansas City Chiefs fan, enjoyed fixing things and helping others, helping with family home projects, golfing, fishing, camping, traveling, walking his dog Gunner, and the occasional trip to the casino. He loved spending time with his children and grandchildren, and going to their games and performances. Family was extremely important to him and he was fortunate to have thirty-nine of his family members go on a family cruise last June as he and his wife celebrated 50 years of marriage.

Survivors include his wife Sandy, of the home in Hays, two sons; LeRoy Kreutzer, Jr. and wife Jenny of Wichita, Kyle J. Kreutzer and wife Jaime of Hays, four grandchildren; Cody and Brady Kreutzer of Hays and Kelsie and Karlie Kreutzer of Wichita, a sister; Firma Pfannenstiel of WaKeeney, and numerous nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents, three brothers; Marvin, Kenneth, and an infant brother LeRoy, and six sisters; Anna, Alice, Verla, Millie, Neola, and Viola.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11:00 am on Thursday, February 28, 2019 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church with Fr. Barry Brinkman officiating. Private family inurnment will be at a later date in the St. Joseph Cemetery. Visitation will be from 5:00 pm until 8:00 on Wednesday and from 9:30 am until 10:45 on Thursday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home. A parish vigil service will be at 6:30 pm on Wednesday at the funeral home. Memorials are suggested to Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas (DSNWK) or to the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church building fund, in care of the funeral home. Condolences and memories of LeRoy may be shared with the family at www.haysmemorial.com

Great Bend auto junkyard to be featured on Monday’s American Pickers

By Cole Reif

BARTON COUNTY —Chad Ehrlich operates Nobody Else’s Auto Recycling, a yard with more than 1,000 parts and project cars in stock. The lot is at 332 North U.S. Highway 281 in Great Bend.

Nobody Else’s was recently featured in magazine, and now the junkyard will be featured on a nationally broadcasted television show on the History channel.

Great Bend Community Coordinator Christina Hayes says Ehrlich and his daughter will feature Nobody Else’s on American Pickers.

American Pickers has been airing on the History channel since 2010 as two “pickers” travel the country searching for antiques to restore and resell. Hayes says Nobody Else’s show will be featured Monday, February 25 on the History channel (Eagle Cable TV channel 40 or 640 in HD) beginning at 8 p.m.

 

1st Amendment: Can we own news? Should we be able to?

Lata Nott

News permeates our lives. In the words of Supreme Court Justice Mahlon Pitney, it’s “the history of the day.” We consume it constantly and analyze it endlessly. We debate its value and its veracity. But here’s another aspect to discuss: Can we own it? And should we be able to?

Capitol Forum is a subscription news service that produces policy reports on mergers and acquisitions, corporate investigations and antitrust enforcement. Not exactly page-turners, but the kind of information investors rely on to make business decisions.

In a recent lawsuit filed in federal court in Washington, D.C., against media outlets Bloomberg and Bloomberg Finance, Capitol Forum alleges that, “Within minutes of the release of many of Capitol Forum’s reports, Bloomberg will surreptitiously obtain the report from one or more of Capitol Forum’s subscribers and then republish a summary of that report on its own ‘First Word’ copyrighted subscription service, usually including direct quotations from the Capitol Forum report.”

Most of the lawsuit’s allegations revolve around copyright infringement and contract interference — with one curve ball thrown in: Capitol Forum is also claiming that Bloomberg is violating its property rights under the “hot news” doctrine.

What does that mean? Well, generally speaking, no one owns news. Copyright law doesn’t protect facts and ideas — it protects the specific ways those facts and ideas are expressed. It might prevent Bloomberg from outright copying and pasting Capitol Forum’s policy reports, but it doesn’t prevent it from summarizing them or quoting from them. This is true regardless of how much effort Capitol Forum put into its reports.

Take it from copyright expert Rich Stim: “Facts are not protected even if the author spends considerable time and effort in discovering things that were previously unknown. For example, the author of the book on Neanderthals takes 10 years to gather all the necessary materials and information for her work. At great expense, she travels to hundreds of museums and excavations around the world. But after the book is published, any reader is free to use the results of this 10-year research project to write his or her own book on Neanderthals — without paying the original author.”

The hot news doctrine is a very narrow, very obscure and possibly obsolete exception to this state of affairs. In 1918, the Associated Press (AP) sued its rival, the International News Service (INS), for taking AP news stories, rewriting them and publishing them as its own. The Supreme Court sided with the Associated Press, finding that though no one can own the “history of the day,” news does have economic value as “stock in trade to be gathered at the cost of enterprise, organization, skill, labor and money, and to be distributed and sold to those who will pay money for it.” The court said the AP had a limited property right in the news it reported, one that prevented its competitors (but not the general public) from using it, though only for a short period of time — while the news was “hot.” The hot news doctrine doesn’t broadly apply anymore, but it’s also not quite dead. As the Columbia Journalism Review has pointed out, “The INS opinion itself is no longer good law; it was decided under federal common law, which was largely abandoned in 1938. But the doctrine lives on under state law.”

You can see why Capitol Forum decided to bring up the concept, even though it opened them to mockery for dredging up a legal argument that hasn’t really been successful since it was applied to telegraph dispatches about World War I. TechDirt described the hot news doctrine as a “mostly obsolete and, frankly, bizarre attempt to turn the idea of publishing a similar news story too quickly after the original reporters broke the story into a form of ‘misappropriation.'”

Bloomberg’s editor-in-chief made the following statement: “This case challenges routine newsgathering practices protected under the First Amendment, and Bloomberg will vigorously defend journalists’ right to gather and report the news.” The hot news doctrine has never gone up against the First Amendment; there are valid concerns that if revived it would have a chilling effect on speech and press freedoms. The internet is, in essence, a network where information is shared, analyzed, remixed and repackaged freely and constantly. What would it mean for any player in this system to “own” a set of facts, even for a limited amount of time?

Of course, this cuts both ways. That freewheeling exchange of information has made the profit margins of actually discovering information pretty slim. Gathering and verifying facts is costly and time-intensive; summarizing those facts with a few choice quotes and a little pithy commentary is not (that’s probably why there’s so much more opinion journalism than the investigative variety).

It seems fundamentally unfair we don’t provide more compensation and recognition for the harder labor, but at the same time, this reflects the strange and contradictory view we have of the news. Information about the world around us is a right, a public good — and also a product.

Lata Nott is executive director of the First Amendment Center of the Freedom Forum Institute. Contact her via email at [email protected], or follow her on Twitter at @LataNott.

Annual seat belt enforcement planned for next 2 weeks

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Teen drivers in Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma might see more law enforcement officers near their schools in the next two weeks.

The Kansas Highway Patrol says law officers plan their annual special traffic enforcement to encourage teen drivers to wear seatbelts. The campaign will run from Monday to March 8.

Kansas patrol Col. Mark Bruce says the “High Visibility Seat Belt Enforcement Campaign” involves troopers working with local law enforcement agencies to education and enforce the use of seat belts.

The patrol said in a news release that last year, nearly half of all Kansas teens who died in traffic crashes were not wearing seat belts.

Sunny, cold Monday

Monday Mostly sunny, with a high near 30. Wind chill values as low as -4. East southeast wind 8 to 13 mph becoming northeast in the afternoon.

Monday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 10. Wind chill values as low as -3. Northeast wind 10 to 14 mph.

TuesdayMostly cloudy, with a high near 25. Wind chill values as low as -3. North northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Tuesday NightMostly cloudy, with a low around 17. North northeast wind 5 to 9 mph.

WednesdayMostly cloudy, with a high near 24.

Wednesday NightMostly cloudy, with a low around 14.

ThursdayPartly sunny, with a high near 31.

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