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Tuesday morning Injury Accident Hwy 40-Update

1:50 p.m. According to the Russell County Sheriff’s Office, “on September 3rd at approximately 7:24 a.m. a Chevy Silverado pickup driven by Mitchel Daugherty was turning north from Highway 40 onto 177th Street in Russell.  A Ford Escape driven by Autumn Huber was slowing down behind the first vehicle.  A third vehicle, a Dodge Avenger driven by Jesse Cockrell, was approaching the intersection.  The driver did not see the vehicles slowing down in front of him.

The third vehicle struck the middle car, pushing it into the turning pickup.  Jesse Cockrell was removed from his vehicle by emergency workers and transported to Russell Regional Hospital. The other vehicle occupants refused treatment at the scene.

The Avenger and Escape were disable and had to be towed from the scene, the Silverado was driven away by the owner.”

The Russell County Sheriff’s office stated that no additional details, including information on whether there were additional passengers, is being released at this time.

7:50 a.m.  One teenager involved in the Tuesday morning accident is being transported to the hospital in Russell.

7:40 a.m. An SUV and a passenger car are reported to be involved in the Tuesday morning  rear end accident on Highway 40.

 

Law enforcement and additional emergency responders are on the scene of a two vehicle accident on Highway 40 and 177th. This is a mile east of Gorham.

site of the Tuesday morning accident east of Gorham
site of the Tuesday morning accident east of Gorham

A lot of debris is reported in the road way.  Stay tuned to Eagle Radio and check Hays Post for more information as it becomes available.

 

Obama names critic to Eisenhower Memorial panel

(AP) — President Barack Obama is appointing a known critic of the planned Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial design to serve on the federal commission that

Eisenhower Memorial
Eisenhower Memorial

oversees the project, weighing into a lingering debate over the memorial’s future.

The White House announced plans to appoint former National Endowment for the Humanities chairman Bruce Cole last month, but it drew little attention while Congress was in recess. Cole served under President George W. Bush.

Cole has published at least two articles in the past 13 months criticizing architect Frank Gehry’s memorial design. He wrote that it would be a “monumental farce” and that the design is “a cross between an amusement park and a golf course.”

Gehry proposed a memorial park with statues and metal tapestries.

This is Obama’s first appointment to the commission.

Kansas Man Sentenced for Bank Robbery

A Topeka man has been sentenced to 78 months for bank robbery, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said today.
Court
Robert Eugene Gibson, 27, Topeka, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of bank robbery.  Gibson admitted that on Feb. 22, 2013, he robbed the Lyndon State Bank at 1535 S.W. Fairlawn Road in Topeka.  Officers of the Topeka Police Department arrested Gibson at a gas station eight blocks from the bank shortly after the robbery.

Grissom commended the Topeka Police Department, the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Maag for their work on the case.

Two Vehicle Accident Sends Driver to the Hospital

A two vehicle accident send one person to the hospital with possible injuries.Kansas Highway Patrol

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, 27-year-old Abby Seck of Hutchinson was stopped on northbound K-61 in Hutchinson waiting to make a left turn on Blanchard when she was struck from behind by a vehicle driven by 21-year-old Taylor Norsworthy of Superior, NE.  Seck was transported to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center with possible injuries.  Neither Norsworthy nor a passenger in Seck’s vehicle, 59-year-old Marlene Johnson-Baker were injured.

Both vehicles had to be towed from the scene. All occupants were wearing seat belts.

Frances J. Rupp

 

Frances J. Rupp, 86, Hays, died Saturday, August 31, 2013 at the Via Christi Villages, Hays.

She was born August 21, 1927 in Catherine, Kansas the daughter of Otto and Mathilda (Schmidt) Hammerschmidt. On November 6, 1948 she married Alois H. Rupp in Catherine. He died January 23, 1989. She was a homemaker and mother and a member of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, the Daughters of Isabella, the Eucharistic Perpetual Adorers, an Associate with the Sisters of St. Agnes, and was a Minister of Praise. She served with the Immaculate Heart of Mary Liturgy Commission for twenty years, the RCIA program for six years, was a Eucharistic Minister and Minister to the homebound for 24 years and was a church sacristan for 24 years.

Survivors include three sons, Rick Rupp and wife Judy of Victoria, Kansas, Neal Rupp and wife Mary Sue of Eldorado, KS, and Kim Rupp and wife Deana of Hays, KS, one daughter Jackie Windholz and husband Otto of Houston, TX, a sisters in law, Alfreda Hammerschmidt, Anita Leiker, and Mary Ann Leiker, grandchildren Heather Rupp, Holly Rupp, Heidi Rupp, Amanda Seyfert and husband Casey, Jesse Rupp and wife Bonnie, Travis Windholz and wife Jennifer, Lyndsie Windholz, Jamie Klug and husband Darren, Dustin Rupp, Jordan Rupp, Taryn Rupp, and Bryson Rupp, seven great grandchildren, and many nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, a son Bill Rupp, two brothers Adolph and Clem Hammerschmidt and an infant sister Mary Hammerschmidt, a grandson Mitch Rupp, and a sister in law Bernita Hammerschmidt, sister in law Betty Struble, and brothers in law Charles Leiker and Jack Struble.

Funeral services will be at 11:00 am on Thursday, September 5, 2013 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church. Burial will be in the St. Joseph Cemetery. Friends may call on Wednesday from 4:00 until 8:00pm and on Thursday from 9:30 am until 10:45, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home. A perpetual adorers rosary will be at 4:00 pm, a Sisters of St. Agnes rosary at 5:00, a Daughters of Isabella rosary at 6:00 followed by a parish vigil service at 6:30, all on Wednesday at the funeral home. Memorials are suggested to the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church building fund, the St. Thomas More Society, or to Hospice of Hays Medical Center, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com

Message from the Governor opens Special Session

The following message from the Governor was read into the record as the special legislative session began today. This message satisfies a Constitutional requirement that the Governor communicate written information about the state of the state at the start of every legislative session.
Brownback
Message from the Governor

“As you know, on July 24, 2013, Attorney General Derek Schmidt formally requested that I call a special session of the Kansas Legislature for the purpose of repairing Kansas’s “Hard 50” sentence in the wake of the June 17, 2013 decision of the United States Supreme Court in Alleyne v. United States.

“There is broad and bipartisan consensus across all of our state’s law enforcement and prosecutorial agencies urging me to adopt the recommendation of Attorney General Schmidt.  Likewise, there is broad and bipartisan support among the leaders of this Legislature that a special session is necessary and is in the best interests of public safety.

“As the Attorney General has written, the “Hard 50” sentence “is a vital public safety tool enacted by the Legislature more than a decade ago to remove the ‘worst of the worst’ killers from society for at least 50 years.” Legal experts and prosecutors across Kansas agree and have advised me that the Alleyne decision renders our “Hard 50” sentence unconstitutional because under current law, it is imposed by a judge rather than by a jury.

“Attorney General Schmidt has further advised that a relatively simple procedural fix allowing the jury to make the necessary factual findings, if adopted by the Legislature, will cure the constitutional defect.  Until such a cure is enacted, however, all criminal defendants who would otherwise be eligible to receive the “Hard 50” sentence upon conviction will instead receive a maximum sentence of only 25 years.  Due to the constitutional and statutory requirement that the state bring criminal defendants to trial in a speedy manner, this has created a situation where time is of the essence.

“Enacting a Legislative cure during the 2014 regular session of the Kansas Legislature as would likely occur in the ordinary course of our legislative calendar will, in the words of Attorney General Schmidt, “virtually guarantee” an increase in “the number of convicted killers who will be eligible for parole after only 25 years instead of after 50 years.”  This fact led the Attorney General to opine that the current circumstance does in fact rise to the level of an “extraordinary occasion” sufficient to justify this office exercising its authority to call the Legislature into special session pursuant to Article 1, Section 5 of the Kansas Constitution.

“As such, in my considered judgment, in reliance upon the advice of the Attorney General of the State of Kansas and the bipartisan consensus of the law enforcement community across Kansas, I find that these circumstances present a real and present danger to the public safety of the citizens of Kansas and does, if fact, constitute an “extraordinary occasion” justifying a special session of the Legislature.

“I am confident that the Legislature can and will act quickly, with resolve and narrow focus to protect the safety of all Kansans by restoring to prosecutors the immediate ability to seek the “Hard 50” sentence for those criminals convicted of the “worst of the worst” kinds of crimes.

“As of 8:00 A.M., September 3, 2013, pursuant to Article I, Section 5 of the Kansas Constitution, I hereby call the Kansas Legislature into special session.”

SWAP Out Kid’s Clothes (and more) for Free

Clothes 001Early Childhood Connections is hosting SWAP Saturday, September 14th from 8am – 10am in the Hays High School Cafeteria.  Beth Hansen, Parent Educator at Early Childhood Connections, told Hays Post that SWAP is just like a garage sale without any money being exchanged.

“It’s an opportunity for families to kind of move on some of those items that they are no longer needing and in a sense swap it with something that now their child will be growing into or will play with.”

Families can donate any gently-used maternity clothing, baby items, children’s toys, books, and children’s clothing up to size 5-6 years.  Drop off is Friday September 13th 3:30 pm – 6:00 pm.  Organizers will lay the donations out like a large garage sale with items arranged by type, gender and age.  The next morning, families can come back and choose what items their family could use at no cost.  Hansen said that the event is open to everyone.

“It is open to the community; you do not need to be part of the early childhood connections program.  Of course, we always encourage taking what your family needs; consider that there are other families out there that are needing the same kinds of things.”

Organizers will provide bags/sacks if needed.  While a donation of unneeded children items is encouraged, it’s not a requirement.  All are welcome at the SWAP.  Hansen said that in past years, there have been lines of people the morning of the event.  She added that a lot of residents benefit from the event, which is the purpose this is put on every year.  Hansen also said that the Hays High School cafeteria has been full in past years, both with donated items and families looking for items.

At the end of the event, all remaining items will be donated to a group that will be able to use the goods to assist families in need.  For example, last year a Hays High student who had been collecting the remaining donations took a U-Haul of goods to a Native-American reservation to distribute.  Hansen said that the ultimate goal, either during the event or afterwards, is to help families in need.

Anyone with questions can contact Early Childhood Connections at 785-623-2440.

Injury Accident South of Ellis UPDATE

1400 Block of Ellis Avenue, site of the Sunday evening accident
1400 Block of Ellis Avenue, site of the Sunday evening accident

Due to the Labor Day holiday, release of the official report on this accident was delayed.

Tuesday 10:45 a.m. A single vehicle accident in southeastern Ellis County Sunday night sent a Garden City man to the hospital.

According to the Ellis County Sheriff’s Office, a 2007 GMC pickup was traveling north in the 1300 block of on Ellis Avenue when an unknown object, possibly a bird, struck the vehicle’s windshield.

The driver, Shelby Salinas, 36 of Scott City, jerked the wheel to the right causing the vehicle to enter the east ditch.

The pickup traveled about 400 feet in the ditch before striking a culvert.

The Ellis County Sheriff’s Office said that a passenger, Jackie Stroud Jr. of Garden City was transported to Hays Medical Center.

Two other passengers in the pickup were not injured.

Monday 9 a.m.  Law enforcement authorities have yet to release details on Sunday’s accident.

 

A single vehicle accident was reported in the 1400 block of Ellis Avenue approximately 9:40 Sunday evening. According to authorities, there were 4 individuals in the car. One of them was transported to Hays Medical Center.

Stay tuned to Eagle Radio and check Hays Post for more information as it becomes available.

Prickly Pear Cactus

By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm BureauInsight

Ever hear of digging prickly pear cactus out of a pasture for 50 cents an acre?

I hadn’t either until longtime Phillips County resident Max Schick told me his story.

Schick was a boy of 10 back in the mid ‘30s when the U.S. government paid people to rid their grass of prickly pear cactus. He and his older brother toiled for two years on his family’s 65-acre pasture to rid the land of these sticky, nuisance plants threatening the western Kansas short-grass prairie.

Extremely drought-resistant, the prickly pear cactus was thriving during the drought of the Dirty Thirties crowding out the grassland and food supply of cattle.

There’s a bit of untold irony here as well, Schick says. Some of the grass survived only because the cattle couldn’t reach it because of the cactus spines and stickers.

“Back then, the cactus hills dotted the pasture like fly specs,” Schick says. “They were everywhere in the pasture.”

On his family’s farm, located approximately seven miles northeast of Logan, Schick and his brother dug the cactus out of the ground with a shovel. They couldn’t afford gloves and were always fighting the little red stickers that broke off the plant sand became embedded in their clothes and skin.

Every night when they finished digging cactus, the two boys would go down to the pond and try to wash themselves clean of the prickly pear cactus.

“The pond was our shower back then,” Schick says. “It’s how we got clean.”

The Schick brothers dug from breakfast to dinner and from dinner until supper time. After about two days of digging, they’d go out with a team and wagon and load up the cactus and haul it into the farmstead and throw them in a rick or stack.

“You had to dig each plant out of the ground and then take ‘em clean out of the pasture,” Schick says. “At the bottom of each cactus was a little bit of a root, about as round as your little finger and a couple inches long. If you didn’t get the root and all, the cactus would sprout and grow again.”

When the brothers finally finished prickly pear excavation project, their uncle and grandfather received payment from the government. The sum of approximately $32.50 was considered a gold mine back then, Schick recalls.

“I didn’t get anything, my brother kept it all,” he says. “I was just trailing along for the fun. At 10 and seven miles from a town we only went to three times a year, what did I need money for?”

Young Schick has no regrets about the two years of his young life spent digging prickly pear cactus out of his family’s pasture. He prefers to look at this period in his life that made him appreciate what he did have.

It was also during this time he discovered a treasure that still holds his interest 75 years later.

“I can remember it like it was yesterday,” Schick remembers. “It was along about 11 in the morning and I was pretty tired from all that digging. There he lay in a low spot in the pasture a few feet from a cactus I was workin’ on.”

That’s when the Phillips County farm boy saw his first arrow head.

“It was about two inches long and worked on both sides,” Schick says. It was made of flint with a round, good point – a real beauty.”

Since that day many years ago, the Phillipsburg resident still collects, trades and admires his Native American arrow heads. He’s walked many a mile and worn out the knees on more than one pair of coveralls in search of his passion littered across the High Plains prairie.

At the spry age of 86, Schick reports he’s “doin’ fine.”

And with autumn just around the corner, he’s preparing for his pumpkin patch and telling stories with the youngsters. But don’t kid yourself, he still finds time to look through his collection of arrow heads – especially his favorites.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

2 Kansas listeria victims sue over tainted fruit

(AP) — The families of two Sedgwick County victims of a 2011 listeria outbreak are suing companies involved in getting tainted cantaloupe to market from a Coloradocourt-gavel farm.

The families of a 59-year-old Wichita man who died of the disease in September 2011 and a Haysville woman who still suffers from the illness filed lawsuits last month.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the listeriosis outbreak that killed 33 people in 28 states lasted from August to October 2011 was traced to Jensen Farms of Holly, Colo.

Both suits charge negligence against a Texas company that sold the cantaloupe, a California company involved in auditing the farm, and the respective grocery stores where the victims purchased the fruit.

New Church Launch this Sunday

Celebration Community Church will launch a new satellite campus this Sunday in Codell Kansas.

Codell Baptist Church is merging with Celebration Community Church of Hays in order to bring a lively contemporary style of worship experience to Rooks County.

Celebration Community Church Codell will begin this Sunday September 8th at 10:45am. The music will be contemporary, the messages multi-media driven , practical and delivered  by C3’s founding pastor Kyle Ermoian. As with all Celebration Church’s communion is served each Sunday.   This is the second satellite campus in the Celebration family, the other is Celebration Community Church Colby which meets Sundays at 10:45am at the Colby Community Building.  For more information about Celebration Community Church visit their website at www.celebratejesus.org

Suspect in Monday’s deputy shooting, heading to Western Kansas?

(AP) — Butler County Sheriff Kelly Herzet says he believes a man suspected of shooting and wounding of one of his deputies might be headed to Western Kansas. He reportedly has friends in Liberal.

Kilbourne
Kilbourne

Herzet says officers searching for 41-year-old Jan Kilbourne on Tuesday are pursuing tips about the Kilbourne’s location. The sheriff said  Tuesday morning that his department currently is concentrating on contacting Kilbourne’s family and friends.

Kilbourne is suspected in the shooting early Monday after a deputy pulled over a car carrying three people on U.S. Highway 54, about 16 miles east of Wichita. The deputy was shot in the shoulder but was able to return fire. Kilbourne then fled.

The Wichita Eagle reported the deputy was treated and released from a hospital. His name hasn’t been released.

 

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