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TEG FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 2016 V V V PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1895 V V V TWO-VEHICLE CRASH RESULTS IN INJURIES By John Robinson [email protected] A two-vehicle crash at 10:45 a.m. on Thursday resulted in two individuals being transported to Newman Regional Health for injuries. According to officers at the scene, a pickup truck was headed east on Sixth Avenue when it struck a van, which was northbound on Constitution Street. The van then flipped and skidded. Bastian Wade witnessed the collision and said the truck “pulled out of nowhere.” “The lights were red and the truck pulled out of nowhere and slammed into the side of that car,” Wade said adding the collision sounded like an explosion. “It was loud.” According to officers at the scene, it is believed that the driver of the pickup ran a red light. The two occupants of the van reJOHN ROBINSON/GAZETTE ceived transport to Newman for minor injuries. The driver of the truck Two vehicles collided at Constitution Street and Sixth Avenue leaving two people with minor injuries did not receive medical transport. Thursday morning. GLASS GUILD BLOWOUT By Cathryne Scharton [email protected] Saturday, the Emporia State University Glass Guild will hold the annual Glass Guild Blowout at the Art Annex, 1702 Highland St. This year, the featured artist is John Miller, an associate professor of glass at Illinois State University. Miller has been working with students this week as well. Activities Saturday include hot glass demonstrations f ro m 9 : 3 0 Glass Guild a.m. to 12:30 Blowout p.m. and 1 : 3 0 p . m . WHEN to 5 p.m., Saturday, 9:30 a.m. lunch, mu- to 8 p.m. sic by Don- WHERE key Show at ESU Art Annex, 5:30 p.m., 1702 Highland St. a barbecue potluck din- The event is free ner at 6 and and open to the a glass auc- public. tion at 7 p.m. The proceeds from the auction will be used to fund future visiting artists, supplies, equipment and educational field trips for glass students. According to Miller’s website, he began working with glass in 1987 in the undergraduate program at Southern Connecticut State University, (SCSU) in New Haven, Connecticut. He later earned an MFA in Sculpture at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. Since 1993 he has been a staff member at Pilchuck Glass School in many different capacities, as a technician, coordinator, gaffer and instructor. Miller exhibits internationally and frequently tours the country GAZETTE FILE PHOTO lecturing and demonstrating with Students in the 2015 Glass Guild Blowout demonstrate glass blowing techniques.  hot glass. The website also states, he has shown work at Habatat Galleries, Royal Oak, Michigan, William Traver Gallery, Seattle Washington, and at Sculpture, Objects and Functional Art (SOFA) in Chicago, among others. Miller has work in permanent collections The Emporia Gazette across the country and internationally: Glazen Huis, Lommel, Belguim, Museum of Arts and Design, New York; Chysler Mutudents in Emporia seum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia; State University’s athMobile Museum of Art, Tacoma Museum of Glass, Pilchuck Glass letics program danced School, and the Museum of Amerthe night away with area ican Glass, Millville, New Jersey. Miller has been featured in Glass seniors at the annual Magazine, American Craft, Glass senior prom. This year, Quarterly, and Vetro Magazine.  ‘PICKIN’ AND GRINNIN’ AT THE PROM S the theme was country and western. VOL. 124, NO. 240 CATHRYNE SCHARTON/GAZETTE  Good Evening VVV Help ‘heat up’ the sales at the Glass Blown Auction. WWW.EMPORIAGAZETTE.COM AMBRIZCERVANTES SENTENCED By John Robinson [email protected] Diego Ambriz-Cervantes was sentenced Wednesday to nearly seven years in prison for a kidnapping conviction. Ambriz-Cervantes was found guilty on one count of kidnapping in February. The charges stemmed from an incident that occurred on Feb. 3, 2014. On that date the Emporia Police Department was called to a residence in the 900 block of Graphic Arts Road. There they found a female bound in duct tape. The female explained that a man knocked on her door and when she opened it he forced his way into her residence. He placed a gun to her head, bound her wrists behind her back with duct tape and taped her arms to her torso. After the man left the residence the woman sought help at a neighbors home. It was estimated that over $2,000 was stolen from the residence. During trial evidence was presented that a fingerprint found on the duct tape was an exact match to Ambriz-Cervantes. Ambriz-Cervantes will spend six years and seven months in prison along with three years of supervision after he is released. He will also have to register as a violent offender due to his kidnapping charge.  COMMISSION APPROVES BID TO IMPROVE ELECTRICAL AT FAIRGROUNDS By John Robinson [email protected] During the 2015 Lyon County Fair, hundreds of fans were waiting to hear the  John Michael Montgomery concert when the grandstands lost power. The combination of lights and sound equipment was too much of a electrical demand for the fairgrounds causing the blackout. Fairgrounds staff scrambled to bring back up power sources to make sure the show could go on.  Since that event the Lyon County Commission has been studying the issue of how to increase the electrical capacity at the fairgrounds and yesterday during the Commission meeting approved a $239,500 bid from Topeka-based Torgeson Electric, for electrical work at the Lyon County Fairgrounds. “The project consists of addressing some of our electrical issues on the fairgrounds,” said Sam Seeley, fairgrounds manager, in February. “Looking at the concert area where the grandstand is, making sure we have the proper electrical needs there. We’ll also be lookin rBF