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Ellis County Sheriff’s log, Sept. 15

AOBB-Logo-Main11

Suspicious vehicle, 280th Avenue and Emmeram Road, 7:12 a.m.
Criminal transport, Stockton, 10:08 a.m.
Criminal transport, WaKeeney, 11:53 a.m.
Phone/mail scam, Hays, 3:24 p.m.
Criminal transport, WaKeeney, 3:46 p.m.
Fire, 900 block Noose Road, 3:06 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 1600 block 230th Avenue, 5:55 p.m.

FHSU’s Herman sits atop leaderboard at UNK Invitational

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State men’s golfer Trey Herman holds the lead at the UNK Invitational heading into the final round on Tuesday. Herman’s four-under par 68 in the second round on Monday at Awarii Dunes Golf Course in Axtell, Neb., pushed him to the top of the leaderboard, where he holds a two-shot lead at four-under par overall.

FHSU Athletics
FHSU Athletics



Minus his opening round of the year last week in the first MIAA sanctioned event of the year, Herman is on a tear over his last four rounds which total six-under par overall. He shot even par and two-under par in his final two rounds last week, charging from 34th to finish seventh, and has shot four-under par in his first two rounds this week.

Herman holds a two-shot advantage on Gonzalo Martinez of Minnesota State-Mankato, who sits at 2-under par overall. Ross Miller of Minnesota State-Mankato, and Tyler Koivisto of St. Cloud State are both three back at 1-under overall. Four more golfers sit at even par overall. Herman’s 68 was the lowest round of the day and only two other golfers dipped into the 60s with 69, which included Martinez of Minnesota State-Mankato.

The Tigers as a team sit in eighth place overall with a total of 606. FHSU had a 307 in the first round, and went eight shots lower in the next round with 299. Minnesota State-Mankato leads the tournament at 577.

Grant Storey  is currently tied for 20th after a first round 78, backed up with a 1-under par 71. NickVonLintel is tied for 39th after rounds of 76 and 77. Billy Frey is 72nd after rounds of 81 and 83. Kade Megaffin is 78th after rounds of 94 and 87.

Dyson, Gore score in 9th as Royals beat White Sox

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jarrod Dyson loves to boast about what speedy base runners can do.

Dyson and Terrance Gore used their speed to score as pinch runners in the ninth inning as the Kansas City Royals rallied to beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 on Monday night.

“He knows he’s got the ability to steal the tough base,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Mike Moustakas doubled with one out in the ninth. Dyson ran for him and stole third and came around to score as Jake Petricka (1-5) threw a wild pitch.

Lorenzo Cain's infield single drove in the game-winning run in the Royals 4-3 victory over Chicago Monday night. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)
Lorenzo Cain’s infield single drove in the game-winning run in the Royals 4-3 victory over Chicago Monday night. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)

“I was definitely going to be safe,” Cain said. “I just put it in play and ran. They ended up bobbling the ball and Gore scored. I was definitely thinking he’d field it and hold on. (Cain is) fast. It’s a huge win for the boys.”

It was a bizarre ending to a game that the White Sox led 3-0 going into the seventh.

“It was strange,” White Sox manager Robin Ventura said. “When you see a play like that you think that’s OK, you can give it to them and try to get the next guy, but then they get another one. That kid (Gore) is fast. Speed can do a lot of things.”

Wade Davis (9-2) worked a scoreless ninth to pick up the victory, extending his scoreless streak to 31 2-3 innings.

White Sox starter John Danks pitched six scoreless innings and allowed just two singles, both by Aoki, before departing after 103 pitches. He struck out six and walked four. Danks, who has a 1.73 ERA at Kauffman Stadium, has never lost to the Royals in 15 career starts.

The Royals scored all their runs off three White Sox relievers.

Royals starter James Shields gives up three runs on 10 hits Monday. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)
Royals starter James Shields gives up three runs on 10 hits Monday. (Photo: Chris Vleisides)

Royals right-hander James Shields, who had his career best 18 1-3 scoreless innings streak ended in the first, gave up three runs and 10 hits, while striking out six and walking none in seven innings.

“We had a lot of opportunities, but he came through,” Ventura said. “We never got the big hit to put it out of reach. He was tough.”

Avisail Garcia’s two-out single in the first scored Adam Eaton. Eaton, who had three hits, led off the White Sox third with a double and scored on a Shields’ wild pitch. Conor Gillaspie singled home Alexei Ramirez with the second run of the inning.

Eric Hosmer hit a double into shallow left off Javy Guerra to open the seventh and scored on Omar Infante’s single for the first Kansas City run.

Aoki led off the eighth with an infield single, advanced to second on Gillaspie’s throwing error, took third on a Zach Putnam’s wild pitch and scored on Alex Gordon’s single.

AOKI’S BIG NIGHT

Aoki’s four hits, two that did not leave the infield, matched his career high, last accomplished on Sept. 20, 2013, against St. Louis. He also walked, reaching base five times. Aoki, who swings left-handed, is hitting .360 against left-handed pitching. It was his fourth multi-hit game in his past eight games.

UP NEXT

White Sox: RHP Chris Bassitt will make his fourth career appearance and third big league start Tuesday. Bassitt has allowed 14 hits, walked seven and hit two batters in 13 1-3 innings.

Royals: RHP Liam Hendriks, who retired only seven of the 15 batters he faced in a loss Thursday to Boston, will make another spot start Tuesday.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: DH-1B Paul Konerko (fractured left hand) took batting practice and could return to the lineup this week.

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy (sore shoulder) will miss another start. He is scheduled to throw a 50-pitch four-inning simulated game Tuesday. If he has no problems, he will start Monday at Cleveland. . DH-OF Josh Willingham (groin strain) said he is available to pinch hit. He has trouble running, but not swinging.

Police: Kansas teens charged in party bus robbery

Screen Shot 2014-09-16 at 5.16.35 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police say they’ve charged four teenagers in the armed robbery of a party bus and the beating of its driver.

Lt. James Espinoza tells the Wichita Eagle the boys are 14-17 years old. He says they robbed four people of cellphones, wallets and money on Sept. 5 and that one boy was armed with a shotgun.

The driver was knocked out and suffered “numerous fractures to his face.” An update on the driver’s condition wasn’t released.

The teens are each charged with four counts of aggravated robbery and one count of battery. They haven’t been identified.

A spokesman for the Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office says it hasn’t been determined if any of them will be tried as adults.

Specialists use telehealth system to give ER care in Kansas

Becky Vande Kieft, eEmergency nurse manager at Phillips County Hospital, talks via the new telemedicine link with a nurse at Avera eEmergency.-Photo by Bryan Thompson
Becky Vande Kieft, eEmergency nurse manager at Phillips County Hospital, talks via the new telemedicine link with a nurse at Avera eEmergency.-Photo by Bryan Thompson

By Jim McLean
KHI News Service

PHILLIPSBURG — A new nurse was on duty a few weeks ago in the emergency room at the Phillips County Hospital when paramedics arrived with a critically injured patient.

She immediately pushed the red button on some newly installed equipment. Seconds later, a seasoned ER nurse and board-certified doctor sitting at a bank of monitors 380 miles away in Sioux Falls, S.D., were using a high-definition camera and other diagnostic equipment to monitor the patient, give advice and document everything the on-site nurse was doing to save the patient’s life.

“The (Phillipsburg) nurse who was on was brand-new and she was being overwhelmed,” said Michelle Peak, a more experienced nurse who hustled to the ER to help.

Peak said even after she arrived, having an off-site nurse wired in and taking care of the charting was a “huge help.”

“It put us all a little more at ease,” she said. “But the big thing was, we didn’t have to take our hands off the patient.”
First in Kansas

The Phillipsburg hospital is the first in the state to sign up for a 24/7 telemedicine program operated by Avera Health, a Catholic health care system based in Sioux Falls. For a flat fee of about $65,000 a year, it and the other hospitals in the network can make unlimited use of the eEmergency system.

“We want people to use it when they need it,” said Darcy Litzen, sales director for Avera’s eCare suite of telemedicine services, which also include eICU and ePharmacy. “We don’t want them thinking that it’s going to cost them an additional $50 or $75 every time they hit the button.”

With the addition of Phillipsburg, 89 rural hospitals in eight states across the upper Midwest are now using eEmergency, Litzen said. Another 10 are expected to come online soon, including Horton Community Hospital in northeast Kansas.
“I’ve been a firm believer in telemedicine since it first started evolving in the early 1990s,” said James Noble, CEO of the Horton hospital.

Having emergency room physicians, nurses and other specialists available day and night at the touch of a button can help less experienced staff in rural settings be more decisive in situations where every second counts, Noble said.

“It just increases their level of confidence,” he said. “It’s real time. You’ve got your second opinion right there. And you’ve got that specialist who’s an immediate backup for the family practitioner on call.”

Having specialists in the room, even if it’s via a video monitor, can also give patients increased confidence that they’re getting the care they need, Noble said.

‘Scary to be there by yourself’

Dr. Donald Kosiak can sympathize with the Phillipsburg nurse who found herself overwhelmed. He’s been there. With a medical degree from the University of North Dakota and graduate training at the Mayo Clinic, he confidently set up practice in the same small North Dakota town where his father and grandfather had practiced.

“There’s probably nothing I’m going to see in this small town that would ever scare me,” Kosiak said he remembers thinking at the time.

He was wrong. The first time he was called to the ER it was to treat a 16-year-old boy who had collapsed at school after suffering cardiac arrest. Wanting help, Kosiak said he asked the ER staff about using the telemedicine equipment sitting in the corner to connect with a specialist.

“They said, “Well, we’d have to dust it off and plug it in and remember how to use it, and then we’d have to call up to Bismarck, and they would have to dust their equipment off and call somebody. After about an hour, we might be able to make this work,’” he said recalling what he was told.

Kosiak wasn’t able to save the boy’s life.

“I think we did all the right things looking back on it, but it’s scary to be there by yourself and be the last and only line of defense for anything that comes through the front door,” he said.

That experience motivated Kosiak to help develop the Avera eCare system, with funding provided by the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.

Holding on to patients

Michelle Peak, a registered nurse, and other staff at Phillips County Hospital watch their new video link with Avera eEmergency.-photo Bryan Thompson
Michelle Peak, a registered nurse, and other staff at Phillips County Hospital watch their new video link with Avera eEmergency.-photo Bryan Thompson

Backstopping onsite caregivers helps to provide them confidence to treat patients they otherwise would be inclined to transfer to bigger hospitals and trauma centers, said Noble, the Horton hospital chief executive.

“I will tell you that right now, 99 percent of the time we err on the side of caution and decide to transfer patients,” he said.

But Noble said he believes that will change once the hospital is wired into the eEmergency system. If the hospital is able to reduce the number of patients it transfers, it would generate additional revenue and allow patients, many of whom are elderly, to recover closer to family and friends, Noble said.

Since 2009, rural hospitals using Avera’s eEmergency service have treated approximately 2,000 patients who otherwise would have transferred to larger hospitals, said Mandy Bell, the company’s development director. Avoiding those transfers generated about $15.8 million in savings and additional revenue for the hospitals, she said.
But many patients can’t get the care they need in a rural emergency room, Bell said. When a critically injured, heart attack or stroke patient needs to be transferred, the eEmergnecy staff can help get it done quickly. While the onsite ER staff is caring for the patient, the Avera nurse can be on the phone with the ambulance service and the destination hospital coordinating the transfer.

“We’ve seen a remarkable reduction in time to transfer,” Bell said.

Research indicates that advanced telehealth systems like those offered by Avera have the potential to produce huge savings, mainly by reducing unnecessary transfers and transportation costs.

A 2007 report by the Center for Information Technology Leadership found that equipping all the emergency rooms in the United States with telehealth technology could reduce patient transfers by almost 40 percent and cut transportation costs by nearly $540 million. The estimated savings, the report said at the time, would be more than enough to cover the costs of installing the equipment.

There also is evidence that hospitals with telehealth systems have an easier time recruiting doctors and other providers, in part because it reduces the stress of being on call.

For those and other reasons, Dave Engel, chief executive of the Phillipsburg County Hospital, is sold on the idea.

“This is really what the future of health care will be,” he said, “using technology to embrace the larger team of providers and specialists to care for individuals.”

Kansas police chief calls for stricter animal laws

BEL AIRE, Kan. (AP) — The Bel Aire police chief has called for tougher animal control regulations after a teenager was hospitalized in a bull terrier attack.

Chief Darrell Atteberry says the dog bit the 13-year-old boy last week on the arms, stomach and genitals while visiting a friend. He says police previously responded to two separate attacks by the same dog in 2012 when the family lived in Wichita.

Atteberry says the boy needed stiches and there have been unspecified medical complications because of the injuries. No charges have been filed.

He says city regulations need to change to better protect people and should coincide more closely with stricter county laws.

The dog was turned over to animal control where it was being observed for 10 days.

 

Kansas farmers planting wheat, harvesting corn

corn plantingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Some Kansas farmers have begun planting next year’s winter wheat while others are busy harvesting corn and sorghum.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that 5 percent of the state’s wheat crop is seeded. That’s about average for mid-September.

Corn harvest has progressed to the 18 percent mark but remains behind the average of 23 percent. Corn condition is rated as 16 percent poor to very poor, 29 percent fair, 42 percent good and 13 percent excellent.

About 2 percent of the Kansas sorghum crop has now been cut, about average for this time of year.

A cold front last week dropped temperatures across the state, with light frost reported in isolated areas of north-central and northwest Kansas.

Cloudy, warmer Tuesday

Screen Shot 2014-09-16 at 4.59.34 AMSkies will gradually clear west to east today with highs up into the upper 70s northeast to the lower to mid 80s west.

Today Areas of fog before 10am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. Light southeast wind becoming south 6 to 11 mph in the morning.
Tonight Mostly cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly clear, with a low around 61. South southeast wind 8 to 10 mph.
Wednesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 86. South wind 6 to 9 mph.
Wednesday Night A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 8pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 63. Southeast wind 7 to 10 mph.
Thursday A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 8am. Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. South southeast wind 7 to 11 mph.
Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 67.
Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 88.

Kansas election law looms large in US Senate race

 

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in an election-law case that could have big implications for GOP hopes of capturing control of the U.S. Senate in November.

The court will hear arguments Tuesday over whether Democrat Chad Taylor must stay on the ballot despite his announced exit from the race. Taylor threw the race into chaos when he announced he wanted to be taken off the ballot, without giving an explanation.

Taylor’s exit seemed to set up a clear two-person race between the three-term incumbent, Republican Pat Roberts, and wealthy independent Greg Orman, who many believe has a chance to unseat Roberts head to head.

Republicans say Taylor didn’t follow state law limiting when nominees can withdraw. Taylor took the case to the high court.

 

Juanita Augustine

juanita

Juanita Augustine, age 86, of Ellis passed away Sunday, September 14, 2014 in Ellis. She was born February 20, 1928 in WaKeeney, Kansas to Bill and Vera (Hyde) Knaus. She married Gilbert J. Augustine Sr.  July 14, 1945. He preceded her in death.

Juanita was a homemaker, avid reader, and proud supporter of the military. She enjoyed spending time with her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Juanita was extremely patriotic and loved her country.  She will be greatly missed by her family and friends. She was a member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Ellis.

She is survived by three sons, Gilbert J. Augustine Jr of Hays, Gary L. Augustine and wife Janice of Wichita and Greg L. Augustine and wife Debbie of Ellis; a brother, Robert Knaus; a half sister, Sherry Knaus; 9 grandchildren, 22 great grandchildren and 1 great-great grandchild.

She was preceded in death by her parents; a great grandson, Clayton A. Dinkel  and a daughter-in-law, Shelia Augustine.

Funeral services will be 10 AM Wednesday, September 17, 2014 at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Ellis. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.

Visitation will be Tuesday 6 PM – 8 PM with a parish vigil service at 7 PM all at Keithley Funeral Chapel 400 E. 17th Ellis, KS 67637.

Memorial contributions are suggested to the Ellis public library.  Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed to [email protected].

Kansas voter wants to keep Democrat in Senate race

Chad TaylorTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas voter says he wants to cast his ballot for the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate who is trying to get his name removed from the ballot.

An attorney for 57-year-old David Orel of Kansas City, Kansas, asked the state Supreme Court on Monday for permission to file friend-of-the court arguments as the justices consider a petition from Democrat Chad Taylor. The court is hearing Taylor’s case Tuesday.

Orel’s filing said removing Taylor from the ballot would divest him of his right to vote for his chosen candidate against three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts.

Taylor dropped out of the race at the urging of some Democrats who see independent candidate Greg Orman as the stronger rival for Roberts and don’t want to split the anti-Roberts vote.

 

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