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The Wichita Eagle from Wichita, Kansas • A1

Publication:
The Wichita Eaglei
Location:
Wichita, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
A1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VOLUME 147, No. 15 STAY CONNECTED WWW.KANSAS.COM FACEBOOK.COM/WICHITAEAGLE TWITTER.COM/KANSASDOTCOM YOUR SOURCE FOR LOCAL NEWS TUESDAY JANUARY 15 2019 $1.50 HEALTHY LIVING Lady Gaga among the sufferers of fibromyalgia 8B SPORTS After this victory, Chiefs fans can shake past Gregorian 1B Partly sunny See 8B Classified 4B Comics 5B Healthy Living 8B Legal ads 3B Local State 2A Obituaries 5A Opinion 7A Sports 1B TV 7B CUSTOMER SERVICE To subscribe or report delivery issues, 1-800-200-8906 or kansas.com/customer-service BUSINESS CHIROPRACTOR SELLS BUILDING Dan Dopps remodeled the HomeTown Buffet space into three businesses three years ago. Now, he has sold the building. 6A HEALTHY LIVING LOOKING AT DIET AND ALCOHOL You want to lose some weight, but your alcohol consumption might be sabotaging your goal to get healthy. 8B NATION WORLD TRUMP REJECTS SUGGESTION President Trump shoots down Sen.

Lindsey proposal to end the federal shutdown and jump-start talks. 8A TOPEKA aura Jeanne Kelly be-came the 48th governorof Kansas on a new chap- ter for the state based on com- promise. inauguration places the office back in the hands of Democrats after eight years of leadership under Republicans Sam Brownback and Jeff Colyer. With the House and Senate firmly under GOP control, the state returns to an era of divided government. She takes over a government that is improving financially but facing key challenges in educa- tion and social services.

Kelly and Lt. Gov. Lynn Rog- ers both took the oath of office on the south steps of the Kansas Capitol, with hundreds watching amid freezing temperatures. Banners behind them pro- claimed: Equality, Education, Opportunity. must work together in the spirit of putting the collective good ahead of any individual ambition or agenda.

We must seek to lift up all Kansans re- gardless of whether they look like us, think like us, worship like us, love like us or vote like Kelly said in her inaugural ad- dress. Over time, public service began to give way to partisan- ship, Kelly said. lost its sense of self, its sense of com- she added. Elected officials bear a special responsibility to live by the ex- amples set every day by Kansans who seek to make their commu- nities a better place to live, Kelly said. When Kansans help each other, not doing it as Republicans or Democrats, just doing right; doing their part to make life a little better for those around she said.

need to bring that same spirit of service and cooperation back to this Kelly said, referencing the Capitol. let the insults and finger-pointing give way to compromise and a handshake, by putting down the partisan swords and lifting up the values that unite us as Kan- in a day and age when our politics can seem so small, we must be as big as the people who sent us WHO WE Kelly, 68, ascended to the office after serving 14 Laura Kelly sworn in as Kansas governor JILL TOYOSHIBA Laura Kelly is sworn in as the 48th governor of Kansas by Chief Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court Lawton Nuss during a ceremony in front of the statehouse in Topeka Monday. Kelly and Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers took the oath of office with hundreds watching amid freezing temperatures.

BY JONATHAN SHORMAN MUST WORK TOGETHER IN THE SPIRIT OFPUTTING THE COLLECTIVE GOOD AHEAD OF ANY INDIVIDUAL AMBITION OR AGENDA. WE MUST SEEK TO LIFT UP ALL KANSANS REGARDLESS OF WHETHER THEY LOOK LIKE US, THINK LIKE US, WORSHIP LIKE US, LOVE LIKE US OR VOTE LIKE US. Gov. Laura Kelly in her inaugural address SEE GOVERNOR, 3A The man who ran over a Wichita police officer trying to halt a fleeing SUV in 2017 causing disabling brain damage and ultimately ending a law enforcement career was or- dered by a Sedgwick County judge on Monday to serve the next three decades in prison, bringing what the wife said was peace and closure to their family. is the final chapter and we got a little closure in the criminal Claudale Arterburn said moments after Judge Bruce Brown told 33-year- old Justin Terrazas that he would be incarcerated for 341 months for several crimes in- cluding driving over Brian Arter- burn on Feb.

7, 2017. Arterburn was deploying a tire deflation device at Topeka and Kincaid in south Wichita to stop vehicle. feel like we have peace. taken us a long time, but we feel like forgiven Mr. Terrazas and hope that he can make something of his life, even if behind Claudale Arterburn said.

At sentencing hearing, police wife forgives man who ran him over BY AMY RENEE LEIKER SEE SENTENCING 2A BO RADER The Wichita Eagle Claudale Arterburn, right, the wife of officer Brian Arterburn, is embraced by her sister Monique Herbel. Arterburn had just given a victim statement on Monday during the sentencing of Justin Terrazas in the February 2017 incident..

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About The Wichita Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
2,719,453
Years Available:
1884-2024