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Graveside Conversations return to Historic Fort Hays

historic ft hays

Fort Hays State Historic Site will present Graveside Conversations on Saturday.

Through first person portrayals, visitors will learn how the people of Fort Hays lived and died, including local legend Elizabeth Polly, known as the Blue Light Lady. Tours are available at 7 and 8 p.m. Reservations required. For reservations, contact (785) 625-6812 or [email protected].

Admission is $3 adults, $1 students. Kansas Historical Foundation members and children five and younger admitted free. Fort Hays State Historic Site is located at 1472 U.S. 183 Alternate.

DSWNK employees, staff recognized for their service

Ken and Rachel Ediger with North Oak Community Church who received DSNWK's Community Support Award for 2014.  They are pictured alongside Jerry Michaud, DSNWK President.
Ken and Rachel Ediger, North Oak Community Church,  received DSNWK’s Community Support Award for 2014. They are pictured alongside Jerry Michaud, DSNWK President.

Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas

Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas hosted its annual awards luncheon Sept. 30 in Hays.

Awards were given throughout the afternoon to staff, persons served and community members. The first awards of the afternoon were given to employees of DSNWK for their years of service. Those staff recognized and listed by location, were:

Atwood – Marsha Eastep, Ellen Horinek, Rebecca Lang, Kimberly Leitner, Stephanie Pelkey, Merry Reeh
Colby – Denise Mentlick, Jane Mentlick
Hays – Eileen Anderson, Paul Arias, Jeffery Baczkowski, Jonathan Baumfalk, Jennifer Brungardt, Valarie Corwin, Joshua Farrington, Jeremy Grizzle, Dale Haag, Cindy Harwood, BJ Hiser, Patti Hoffman, Marlene Irwin, Brooke Kee, Steve Keil, Jeannie Komarek, Deanna Leiker, Kristi Luetters, Devon Meyer, Dan Miller, Joseph Moos, Johanna Musgrove, Janet Naegele, Nicholas Pfeifer, Dilene Reinhardt, Tami Rummel, Ryan Ruth, Wanda Schlegel, LeeAnn Schmidtberger, Kristen Shewey, Barbara Smith, Denise Stritt, Mark Tomanek, Angela Wahlmeier, Maria Whitesell, Paul Wildeman, Andrew Wishon, Kelli Winder
Hill City – Justin Hrabe, Danny Jackson
Norton – Mary Ahlemeyer, Dorothy Becker, Lisa Shearer
Hoxie – Avis Herl, Harriet Richardson
Oakley – Pat Lysinger
Russell – Marsha Niehoff, Dawn Rose, Herb Shumaker
Stockton – Laura Kolb

DSNWK gave special recognition to three staff members who made successful efforts in coming to the aid of persons served by DSNWK in need and providing emergency assistance. Those recognized were: Virginia Carver of Colby, David Musgrove and Murrae Rebarchek of Hays. Special recognition was also paid to two staff members for their outstanding work with persons with disabilities. Dorothy Becker of Norton, and Dawn Marlett of Hays were presented with the Employee of the Year Awards.

Two $100 scholarship awards were presented to Edith Murguia and Kayla Drake of Hays. These awards were given from the Jerelyn Becker Memorial Scholarship Fund for employees studying in higher education in a field related to serving people with developmental disabilities.

Several awards were given to individuals served by DSNWK for achievement through employment and independence. Those receiving awards and listed by location were:
Atwood – Melvin Betzner, Danny Clark, James Goscha, Cheryl Hartzog, Scott Holub, Tallas McNabb
Hays – Richard Graf, Ryan Hoag, Michael Lee, Eric Legleiter, Anita Rogers, Shannon Sander, Brett Skinner, Chuck Stansbury, Joshua Watford, Jason Watkins, Tammy Zadina
Hill City – Jenny Cronn

DSNWK presented two Individual Achievement Awards to individuals served by DSNWK. Tyler Jones of Hays and Scott Holub of Atwood were presented these awards which go each year to one youth and one adult who have shown tremendous individual progress throughout the year. The individuals receiving services in Hoxie were presented with one of DSNWK’s Good Neighbor Awards for their community volunteer efforts.

Several awards were presented to members of area communities during the afternoon. They were:Wal-Mart of Hays, who received DSNWK’s Employer of the Year Award for their outstanding support of people with disabilities in the workforce. The Community Support Award, which was presented to an entity who has shown DSNWK outstanding support, was given to Norton Oak Community Church in Hays. Finally, DSNWK’s second Good Neighbor Award was presented to Jan Dysart of Hays who has shown outstanding support to an individual served in DSNWK’s Supported Living program.

NCK Tech offers appreciation to industry sponsors

Photo Caption (l to r(: Skills USA National Award Winners: Curtiss Anderson, Joel Hayes, Jacob Arnold, Joseph Pfeifer and NCK Welding Department Chair Kyle Kopsa.
From left: Skills USA National award winners Curtiss Anderson, Joel Hayes, Jacob Arnold, Joseph Pfeifer and NCK Welding Department Chair Kyle Kopsa.

NCK Tech

This summer, students from the North Central Kansas Technical College Beloit campus welding program participated in the National Skills USA championship in Kansas City, Mo.

The group returned to Beloit with two national awards. Curtiss Anderson (Burr Oak) placed first for welding and the welding fabrication team — Jacob Arnold (Bennington), Joel Hayes (Douglas) and Joe Pfeifer (Hays) — placed second in the nation.

This national success is a direct result of the tremendous support business and industry provides to the NCK Tech welding program. The support includes the donation of metal and welding consumables, for daily use for welding techniques on pipe and plate, service to the program’s Advisory Committee and assistance with statewide welding competitions.  The Advisory Committee members, who are employees and owners of regional businesses, including Ag-Co/Sunflower, CAT, Winkel Manufacturing, Landoll, Kohler Manufacturing, and Bohnert welding, offer advice on the latest welding technology and the skills needed for employment in the industry.

The welding competitions feature a variety of welding disciplines, including shielded metal arc, gas metal arc and gas tungsten arc. In addition, industry partners have provided the matching funds required for grant opportunities in cutting edge welding technology, such as robotic welding and CNC (computer numerical control) equipment. This funding support is a critical component of technical education and is a key factor in maintaining a high quality, industry recognized training program.

NCK Tech would like to thank the following supporters of technical education and our welding program: AG-CO/Sunflower, Airgas, Alstom Power, Bohnert Welding, Caterpillar,  Crop Production Services, ESAB Electric, Globe Engineering, Great Plains Manufacturing, Hess Services, Jayhawk Pipeline, JP Pipeline, Kansas Gas, Kohler Manufacturing, Landoll, Lincoln Electric, Matheson Tri-Gas, Miller Electric, NCRA, Reinke Manufacturing, Salina Steel, Southern Star Central Gas, Vortex, Webber Gross Welding and Repair, Williams Natural Gas, and Winkel Manufacturing.

REMINDER: Stockton FFA gears up for Halloween fundraising night

FFA

STOCKTON — The Stockton FFA will have its annual Goblin’s Glory Halloween Extravaganza on Oct. 23 at the Stockton High School gyms.

The events start with a soup supper at 6 p.m., followed by a kids costume contest at 6:30 p.m. There will be two age divisions — age 6 and younger and ages 7 to 12.

Games and bingo also will begin at 6:30 p.m., and the merchandise auction will start at 7 p.m.

The Goblin’s Glory king and queen crowning will begin at 8 p.m.

HPD activity log, Oc. 21

AOBB-Logo-Main11

The Hays Police Department conducted 23 traffic stops and received 11 animal calls on Tuesday, Oct. 21, according to the HPD activity log.

Animal injured, 13th and Milner, 8:43 a.m.
Motor vehicle accident-, Eighth and Walnut, 8:59 a.m.
Animal at large, 700 block East Sixth, 9:02 a.m.
Animal at large, 1300 block Douglas, 10:33 a.m.
Suspicious activity, 4300 block Vine, 3:08 p.m.
Assist, 1200 block Fort, 3:17 p.m.
Animal at large, Interstate 70 and Vine, 3:22 p.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 2100 block Milner, 4:05 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 300 block West Eighth, 4:20 p.m.
Shoplifting, 4300 block Vine, 4:22 p.m.
Drug offenses, 400 block West Eighth, 5:28 p.m.
Suspicious activity, 600 block East Eighth, 5 p.m.
Assist, 100 block West 12th, 7:48 p.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 2400 block Donald, 8:43 p.m.
Criminal damage to property, 400 block Fort, 9:02 p.m.
Criminal damage to property, 1300 block Vine, 10:03 p.m.
Disturbance, 300 block Pine, 11:24 p.m.
Theft, 800 block Ash, 1:27 a.m.

Partly cloudy, chance of showers

Screen Shot 2014-10-22 at 5.46.20 AMA chance of isolated thunderstorms this evening with dry conditions through weekend.

Today A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 3pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 75. South wind 8 to 17 mph.
Tonight A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 11pm. Areas of fog after 4am. Otherwise, cloudy, then gradually becoming partly cloudy, with a low around 51. South wind 6 to 8 mph becoming west northwest after midnight.
Thursday Areas of fog before 11am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, then gradually becoming sunny, with a high near 74. Light and variable wind becoming north around 5 mph in the morning.
Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 52. South southeast wind around 7 mph becoming southwest after midnight.
Friday Sunny, with a high near 83. West southwest wind 6 to 8 mph.
Friday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 51.
Saturday Sunny, with a high near 80.
Saturday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 55.
Sunday Sunny, with a high near 79.

 

Bumgarner, Pence lead Giants over Royals in Game 1 of World Series

By RONALD BLUM
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — By the time Madison Bumgarner took the mound to throw his first pitch, the San Francisco Giants already held a three-run lead.

It might as well have been 100 with the way MadBum and this orange-and-black bunch play in the World Series.

Bumgarner carried a shutout into the seventh inning, Hunter Pence homered early and the Giants showed off their October poise, putting a sudden stop to the Kansas City Royals’ perfect postseason roll by romping 7-1 in the Series opener Tuesday night.

“They’ve obviously been on a great run. You don’t get here without that,” Bumgarner said. “I think our team is concentrating on what they need to do, not what the Royals are doing.”

From the get-go, the Giants simply did everything right to win their seventh straight World Series game. There’s a reason they’re trying for their third title in five years.

“I can’t say I’m surprised by these guys,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.

The Royals, meanwhile, looked nothing like the fresh team that had become baseball’s darlings by starting the playoffs with eight wins in a row — back on the field after a five-day layoff, their pitching, hitting and fielding all deserted them.

The fates seemed to change from the very first batter, in fact. Gregor Blanco led off with a soft line drive to center field and AL Championship Series MVP Lorenzo Cain charged, then backed off as the ball fell for a single. It would’ve taken a near miracle to catch it, but that’s the kind of play the Royals had been making on a routine basis.

Moments later, Pence’s homer highlighted a three-run burst in the first inning against James Shields. Nicknamed “Big Game James,” he once again failed to live up to that billing and left in the fourth when the Giants made it 5-0.

“It just wasn’t my night tonight,” Shields said.

By then, Royals fans who had waited since 1985 for the Series to return to town had gone silent. Or, worse, they were booing while small “Let’s go, Giants!” chants echoed through Kauffman Stadium.

Just like that, what many figured would be a tight matchup had turned into a mismatch. And it was a good omen for the Giants — the Game 1 winner has won 15 of the last 17 World Series.

The Royals will try to get even in Game 2 on Wednesday night when rookie Yordano Ventura starts against veteran Jake Peavy.

“We didn’t expect to come in here and sweep the San Francisco Giants,” Kansas City manager Ned Yost said.

Bumgarner added to his sparkling World Series resume, improving to 3-0 and extending his scoreless streak to 21 innings before Salvador Perez homered with two outs in the seventh.

“I would tell you I wasn’t thinking about it, but you know,” Bumgarner said. “There’s no way around it. You know. There’s so much talk about it. Obviously, a World Series game is not something you tend to forget.”

The 25-year-old left-hander was in trouble only once. Down 3-0 in the third, the Royals loaded the bases with a two-out walk and cleanup man Eric Hosmer stepped to the plate, but grounded out on the first pitch.

Bumgarner went on to stretch his road postseason scoreless streak to a record 32 2-3 innings as the Giants cruised. He pitched three-hit ball for seven innings, struck out five and walked one.

Michael Morse hit an RBI single that finished Shields, and reliever Danny Duffy walked Blanco with the bases loaded.

Rookie Joe Panik hit an RBI triple that bounced past usually reliable right fielder Nori Aoki in the seventh and scored on a single by October force Pablo Sandoval. The MVP of the 2012 World Series triumph, Sandoval also had an RBI double in the first that extended his postseason streak of reaching base to 24 straight games.

Pence also doubled and walked twice.

“We’re ready to move on tomorrow,” Shields said. “We have a lot of positive attitude right now, we’re tracking at an all-time high. We just faced a good pitcher tonight.”

Before the game, the mood at the ballpark was positively giddy. Ushers greeted fans with “Welcome to the World Series!” and some hot-dog vendors high-fived each other behind the counter.

Yet the Giants wrecked that fun, and won for the 16th time in their last 18 postseason games. A slight misstep: Tim Lincecum, who hasn’t pitched this postseason, was delayed in the clubhouse and was late getting onto the field when the teams lined up before the game.

The Royals had won 11 straight in the postseason dating to their 1985 championship run, one short of the record held by a pair of New York Yankees clubs.

UP NEXT

Giants: Peavy lost 12 straight decisions this season, spanning his July trade from Boston to the Giants. … The 33-year-old is 1-3 with a 7.03 ERA in seven postseason starts, including an outing for the Red Sox in last year’s World Series. He beat Washington in the NL Division Series and was pulled after four innings vs. St. Louis in the NL Championship Series. … Royals DH Billy Butler is 14 for 33 (.424) with three HRs off Peavy.

Royals: The 23-year-old Ventura will become the first rookie to start a World Series game at any position for the Royals. No Giants hitter has ever faced the right-hander with a 100 mph heater. … Ventura pitched well in an ALDS start against the Angels and struggled vs. Baltimore in the ALCS, leaving with a tight shoulder.

NO REPLAY NEEDED

The first Series game in the expanded replay era didn’t require a single video review. But all six umpires quickly huddled to discuss a foul ball that glanced off Perez’s bat on a bounce, and got it right.

Police: Pet cat killed with shotgun

PoliceWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita Police are investigating the death of a cat killed by a shotgun blast.

Capt. Doug Nolte tells the Wichita Eagle a 56-year-old woman’s pet was killed on Monday night. She found it dead in her driveway.

The woman tells police she was arguing with her neighbor before they both returned to their homes. She says she heard a loud bang before discovering the animal’s body.

Police say they found a shotgun shell on the neighbor’s porch. They say the neighbor denied shooting the cat.

No arrests have been reported.

FHSU women’s golf finishes 6th at Park University Fall Classic

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State women’s golf finished sixth at the Park University Fall Classic, held in Parkville, Mo. The Tigers were tied for fifth after the first day of competition and shot 18 strokes better on day two, but still dropped a spot in the standings. The tournament was held at The National Golf Club of Kansas City, with day two action on The Deuce.

Samantha Hobson made a huge improvement from her first day 96 by shooting 79. Her total of 175 tied for 14th individually. Abby Schmidtberger struggled on the second day, shooting 99 after a first day 89. She tied for 26th overall.

Hadley Tharp shaved seven strokes off her first day score of 101 by shooting 94 on day two. She finished 39th. Quiellen Eichhorn tied for 44th with a 97 on day two after a 101 on day one. Megan DeWerff also competed, shooting scores of 109 and 107.

Fort Hays State shot 756 as a team. Rockhurst won the tournament with a score of 679. Brianna Bondon of Rockhurst and Kamie Rash of Kansas Wesleyan tied for medalist honors, both shooting a total of 159.

The tournament completes the fall slate for the Tigers. They will return to action in the spring.

Kansas secretary of state candidates have debate

Kobach and Shodorf
Kobach and Shodorf

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach is likely to face questions during a televised debate about a proof-of-citizenship requirement for new Kansas voters enacted at his urging.

Kobach makes his second televised joint appearance with Democratic challenger Jean Schodorf on Wednesday night from the studio of Topeka public television station KTWU.

Kobach is seeking a second four-year term. He successfully pushed the Legislature to enact a 2013 law that requires new voters to provide election officials a birth certificate, passport or other proof of U.S. citizenship.

Schodorf voted for the policy as a state senator but says Kobach has poorly administered it.

Kobach contends the requirement prevents voter fraud. But the voter registrations of thousands of Kansas residents are on hold because they haven’t yet complied.

Police search for pair after fatal Kansas crash UPDATE

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka police say two people suspected of being involved in a fatal hit-and-run have turned themselves in for questioning.

The accident Tuesday evening killed a motorcyclist, whose name has not been released. Two people in the car fled on foot after the motorcyclist was hit.

Police said in a news release that an adult man and an adult woman called police late Tuesday and were taken to police headquarters for questioning. No further details were released.

The accident occurred on the Sardou Bridge, which was closed to traffic for several hours before reopening early Wednesday.

Sheriff: Kansas fire chief charged with theft

Screen Shot 2014-10-22 at 5.15.40 AMHOLTON, Kan. (AP) — A Northeast Kansas fire chief has been arrested on theft charges after authorities say he embezzled money while acting as treasurer of an area organization.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  45-year-old Ryan White was arrested this week on two felony and five misdemeanor counts of theft.

Jackson County Sheriff Tim Morse says the Soldier Fire Department chief stole more than $2,000 from the Soldier Ball Association in 2012 and 2013.

White was released from the Jackson County jail after posting bond. He didn’t return a request for comment Tuesday by the newspaper.

It’s unclear if he is still the fire chief. Calls to the Soldier Fire Department by the newspaper weren’t returned.

 

Riley County police to test body cameras

Riley-County-Police (1)MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Riley County police are moving forward with a pilot program to place body cameras on some officers.

The Manhattan Mercury reports Capt. Tim Hegarty announced this week that police will start testing the 11 cameras on Nov. 5. He says Aggieville police officers will wear the cameras on their heads and will activate them manually. The officers will upload the footage at the end of every shift.

The department has paid nearly $6,000 to use the cameras for five years.

Hegarty says if the pilot succeeds, the body cameras could replace dash cameras on patrol cars. He says the pilot will be evaluated after a year.

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