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Protect your vision during Monday’s eclipse

By CRISTINA JANNEY

It takes less than one minute of looking directly at the sun to experience permanent eye damage.

Kendall Krug, doctor of optometry in Hays, is trying to spread the word about eye safety during next Monday’s eclipse.

Viewing the sun directly even when it is partially or fully blocked during an eclipse can cause a condition known as solar retinopathy.

Intense visible light can cause damage to the rods and cones in the eye. The damage depends on the exposure. The exposure can burn a spot on the area of your eye that helps you see detail.

The effects of the sun exposure are painless and can take hours or days to fully appear. Krug compared it to the blind spots we get in our eyes when someone points a camera flash in our eyes — except the blind spot never goes away.

“The retina does not have any pain receptors,” he said, “so you can look at the sun, and it is not going to hurt. It is going to be bright. You are going to shield yourself from the brightness, but it doesn’t actually hurt. That is the problem, you don’t really know you are doing damage.”

There is no treatment for this type of damage, which can affect both eyes. Any loss of sight 20/50 or more would result in a person’s inability to drive or effectively read.

The eclipse can be safely viewed by using aluminized mylar eclipse viewing glasses. There has been some concern in recent weeks fake, unsafe glasses have come on the market. The glasses should be ISO 12312-2 or CE certified and will have this marked on the glasses. Click here to go to the American Astronomical Society’s list of reputable dealers.

The glasses should block 99.9 percent of sunlight, which means you should not be able to see an indoor light while you have them on. No. 14 welders glasses or hood also can be used or a pin hole projector.

When you are done looking at the eclipse, Krug said you should turn away from the sun before removing your glasses.

Pin hole projectors

A pin hole projector can be easily made using a piece of cardboard and piece of paper or a cereal or shoe box. When you use these devices, you turn your back to the sun and a black-and-white image is reflected unto the piece of paper or in the box.

It is not safe to use binoculars or a telescope to view the eclipse unless you have an astronomy solar filter. These should be placed at the front lens and not the eyepiece.

You should not try to take pictures of the eclipse with your mobile device or digital camera without a filter. It will burn out the camera’s components, Krug said.

It is also not safe to view the eclipse with prescription or non-prescription sunglasses, cosmetic tinted contact lenses, smoked glass, or through overcast or partially opaque clouds

 Children should have special supervision during the eclipse. Children’s cornea’s are clearer than adults’ and that makes them more susceptible to eye damage.
Schools have encouraged teachers to include eclipse activities during the school day Monday but has left those up to individual teachers and principals. Some teachers and buildings bought glasses for their students while others will keep younger students indoors so they don’t accidentally hurt their eyes.
Another cool link
Timeanddate.com has views of what the eclipse will look like minute by minute from your specific location. To see the simulation in Great Bend click here.

Official to make case for new mental hospital in Kansas

Tim Keck, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services has s privatization plan for Osawatomie State Hospital
photo Kansas News Service

OSAWATOMIE, Kan. (AP) — The head of the agency that oversees a troubled state mental hospital is making the case for a new facility.

The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services announced in a news release Thursday that Secretary Tim Keck will make presentations in coming weeks in Wichita, Independence, Topeka and Kansas City.

The announcement came after the agency rolled out a proposal Tuesday from Correct Care Recovery Solutions to build a new hospital at the current location of Osawatomie State Hospital and take over operations. Legislative approval would be required.

Federal officials decertified the hospital in 2015 after a series of inspections uncovered problems. The decertification has cost the hospital about $1 million monthly in federal funding, although a recent successful inspection has moved the facility closer to regaining certification.

Duvall out as Ellinwood head football coach

Jason Duvall, who led the Ellinwood Football team to a 9-9 record the past two seasons and the softball team to two consecutive 2nd place finishes in the 2-1A State Softball Tournament, is out as head coach in both sports.

Duvall confirmed Thursday that he has been let go following what he calls a “protocol” issue with money from fundraisers that was used to buy equipment and uniforms for both the football and softball teams.

Alex Birney has been named the Eagles football coach after Duvall was removed from the position on Tuesday.

Duvall will be a guest on “Sports Day” Friday to tell his side of the story. The show airs at 12:25pm on 1590 KVGB and 97.7 FM.

4th suspect jailed in connection with fatal shooting of officer near Kansas City

Noble-photo Henry Co.

CLINTON, Mo. (AP) — A man accused of providing the weapon used to kill a western Missouri police officer is facing new charges, and prosecutors also charged his wife.

Henry County Prosecuting Attorney Richard Shields announced Thursday that William Noble, of Clinton, is charged with hindering prosecution, fraudulent purchase of a firearm and four counts of endangering a child. He already was charged with tampering with physical evidence. Prosecutors contend he bought the rifle Ian McCarthy allegedly used to kill Clinton police officer Gary Michael Jr. on Aug. 6.

Brandie Noble was charged with hindering prosecution and four counts of endangering a child.

Prosecutors say McCarthy was in the Nobles’ home for a time while police were searching for him. The couple’s four juvenile children were in the home.

A call to William Noble’s attorney was not answered.

Kansas woman charged with theft of valuable gold coins

Boggs

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas woman was in court Thursday and charged with the theft of very valuable gold and silver coins. The alleged crimes occurred last year.

Donna Sue Boggs is accused of stealing 60 gold coins on Aug. 22, 2016, with a value between $25,000 and $100,000 and two gold coins and 10 silver coins with a value of more than $1,500, but less than $25,000 on March 29, 2016.

She’s jailed on a bond of $3,000. Her case now moves to a waiver-status docket on Aug. 23.

Suspect dead, Pawnee Co. deputy injured during high-speed pursuit

Near the scene of Thursday’s chase in Pawnee County-image courtesy KWCH

TOPEKA —On Thursday afternoon, the Kansas Highway Patrol was involved in a pursuit, which began in Edwards County, and ended in Pawnee County, around the town of Garfield.

The incident began around 12:45 p.m., when a trooper attempted to stop a vehicle for speeding on US-56 Highway at milepost 163, in Edwards County. The vehicle was occupied by a male driver and female passenger. The suspect vehicle, a maroon Chevy Impala, sped up, and the trooper initiated a pursuit. Around milepost 166, the driver began shooting out of his window at the trooper. The pursuit continued into the town of Garfield, where the suspect shot at, and hit, a Pawnee County patrol car.

At approximately milepost 172, at 12:54 p.m., a Pawnee County deputy attempted legal intervention. The patrol car went into the east ditch, and rolled, trapping the deputy. The suspect’s vehicle went into the west ditch and was disabled. The suspect immediately put a gun to his own head. The female passenger exited the suspect vehicle and was taken into custody. Officers on scene were able to get the deputy out and provide medical care.

Law enforcement personnel on scene were speaking with the suspect to de-escalate the situation, however the suspect eventually shot himself at 1:27 p.m. The suspect was transported via EMS to Pawnee Hospital, where he died. The suspect’s name will not be released at this time, as the Patrol is still working to identify him.

The deputy involved in the crash was transported via EMS with minor injuries, and is in stable condition.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation was immediately called to investigate the incident. Any further information reference this case will come from the investigating agency, the KBI.

Bankers: Drought still burdening rural economy in Kansas

U.S. Drought Monitor map August 15

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A new monthly report shows drought conditions continue to burden the rural economy in parts of 10 Plains and Western states.

The overall Rural Mainstreet Index for the region rose slightly in August to 42.2 from July’s abysmally low 40.7. The index ranges between 0 and 100, with any number under 50 indicating a shrinking economy.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, says nearly 58 percent of bankers reported in August’s survey that drought conditions were having a negative effect on agriculture products in their area.

Also, bankers expect farmland prices to decline by another 3.5 percent on average over the next year.

Bankers from Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming were surveyed.

K-State hopes returning secondary can hold up in Big 12

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) – The school that once produced Chris Canty and Thorpe Award winner Terence Newman has struggled to defend in recent years in the pass-happy Big 12.

It still draws Kansas State coach Bill Snyder’s ire.

The hard-to-please Hall of Fame coach was often quick to bemoan a bunch that allowed 272.7 yards per game through the air last season, better only than the sieve known as Texas Tech. Their shortcomings were only made worse when they were forced to stand beside by the Wildcats’ staunch rush defense, which was by far the best in the Big 12.

But the Wildcats harbor hope for success this season.

They return D.J. Reed, the league’s defensive newcomer of the year, and running mate Duke Shelley at cornerback. Two-year starter Kendall Adams is back to anchor the safety corps, while a host of experience headlined by Cre Moore, Sean Newlan and Denzel Goolsby provide plenty of depth.

Throw into the mix Elijah Walker, the third-ranked junior college safety last season, and some think Kansas State could have the best secondary in the Big 12 – perhaps even the nation.

“I’ve seen it all happen, the good and the bad,” said Shelley, who burned his redshirt as a freshman in 2015 when injuries forced him onto the field. “Really for us as a unit as well, we went from nobody respecting us to, ‘Wow, our unit is getting some love and respect we deserve.’ We knew we deserved it.”

Now it’s time to keep it.

Things started promisingly enough for Kansas State last season, holding Stanford in check in the opener on the road and shutting down Florida Atlantic and Missouri State. But concerns arose when Skylar Howard threw for 298 yards in West Virginia’s comeback victory, and they had a full-scale problem the following two games against Texas Tech and Oklahoma.

First-round draft pick Patrick Mahomes II torched the Wildcats for 504 yards and two touchdowns, while the Sooners’ Baker Mayfield had 346 yards and four TDs passing in a 38-17 rout.

The key is to prevent a similar downturn this season.

“When you have a decent number of returning starters and returning players, the general public will probably say if you have a lot of people coming back then you will have an even better football team,” Snyder said. “We were pretty decent at the end of the season last year, so there is great expectation.

“There is nothing wrong with that. That is great,” he continued. “The key element is you have to do something about it. You just can’t be a returning starter or guy that played an awful lot and the same coaches coming back, etcetera. You have heard me say so many times, every season presents new dynamics.”

One of those dynamics is the schedule.

Kansas State opens Sept. 2 against Central Arkansas, then plays Charlotte the following week. It gives the secondary ample opportunity to come together before a trip to Vanderbilt. But the Commodores are no real threat through the air, ranking 100th out of 128 teams in passing offense a year ago.

Throw in a week off after the nonconference schedule and the Wildcats should have hit their stride before the Big 12 slate opens with games against Baylor, Texas and TCU.

High-powered Oklahoma looms Oct. 21 in a game that could help decide the conference race.

“As long as they keep working, having daily improvement, stay together, play together, we will find replacements for those five or six guys we lost,” Kansas State defensive coordinator Tom Hayes said not only of his secondary but the entire unit. “It’s our job as coaches to identify them and certainly the players’ job to go earn them.”

Kansas man dies in 2-vehicle crash

First responders on the scene of Thursday’s fatal crash in Riley County

RILEY COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just after 1p.m. Thursday in Riley County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1992 Chevy Lumina driven by Francis F. Whitney, 78, Wamego, was southbound on Levee Drive at U.S. 24.

The driver failed to stop at the stop sign

A westbound 2007 Toyota Tundra driven by Ethan B. Engelhorn, 18, Manhattan, struck the Lumina.

Both vehicles came to rest in the left lane of westbound U24.

Whitney was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Steward Funeral Home.

Engelhorn was not seriously injured. Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP

US Senator Pat Roberts visits with Great Bend residents

U.S. Senator Pat Roberts from Kansas makes an appearance at the Great Bend Chamber of Commerce Coffee Hour Thursday, Aug. 17. Roberts discussed big topics coming up for the next session for Congress, including the farm bill. The chamber coffee took place at First Kansas Bank in Great Bend.
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