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Forrest K. Strecker

Forrest Strecker -Paper Picture

HAYS, Kan. — Forrest K. Strecker, age 84, died Wednesday, October 8, 2014, at Hays Medical Center Hays, Kansas.

He was born February 6, 1930, in Russell, Kansas, to Julian and Anna (Steinle) Strecker. He married Phyllis (Hopkins) on September 4, 1954, in Wilson, Kansas.

He started in the Hays Drivers License Examinations Office and was with the State of Kansas for 29 years and retired in 1992 as a Lieutenant with the Kansas Highway Patrol. He lived in a number of communities throughout Kansas including Victoria, Topeka and moving to Hays in 1992. He was raised in Russell, Kansas, was a graduate of Russell High School and was a veteran of the U.S. Army. He was a volunteer Police Officer for a number of years and served as Water Commissioner for the City of Silver Lake. He was a member of the First Baptist Church in Topeka and Hays. He enjoyed hunting, fishing golfing, bowling, going to the casino and spending time with his family and friends.

Survivors include his wife, of 60 years, Phyllis Strecker, of the home; two daughters, Susan Nebel, Hays, KS; Barbara Strecker-Gaudreau and husband, James “Bucky,” Topeka, KS; one sister, Genevieve Combest, Duncan, OK; six grandchildren, Jonathan Burd, Christian Burd, Mariah Nebel, Caleb Nebel, Cameron Gaudreau, and Alexis Gaudreau; two great grandchildren, Jaedyn Nebel and Addisyn Karlin.

He was preceded in death by his parents and one sister, Alice Strecker.

Services are 10:30 A.M. Friday, October 10, 2014, at the First Baptist Church, 12th and Fort, Hays, Kansas.  A graveside service will be at 1:30 P.M. Friday, at the St. John Lutheran Cemetery Russell, Kansas with military honors by the Russell V.F.W.

Visitation is from 5:00 to 8:00 P.M. Thursday at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601 and from 9:30 to 10:30 A.M. Friday, at the First Baptist Church.

Memorials are to Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas or the First Baptist Church Hays, Kansas. Condolences can be sent via email to [email protected].

FHSU Foundation will announce major Power of One gift Thursday

As Homecoming Week activities at Fort Hays State University continue throughout the community, the FHSU Foundation is ready to unveil some exciting news as part of its ongoing scholarship fundraiser.

At 8:30 a.m. Thursday, the foundation will have a press conference to announce a $1 million gift to FHSU’s Power of One campaign. The event will be held at the Dreiling Lobby at Sheridan Hall.

Check Hays Post for details as they become available.

Kansas poet laureate schedules appearance in Lucas

Kansas Poet Laureate Wyatt Townley (Photo by Terry Weckbaugh)
Kansas Poet Laureate Wyatt Townley (Photo by Terry Weckbaugh)

LUCAS — One2one and Eric Abraham’s Flying Pig Studio & Gallery in Lucas will host a public event with Wyatt Townley, Poet Laureate of Kansas, Tuesday, Oct. 21, at 7 p.m. at one2one/Eric Abraham’s Flying Pig Studio & Gallery, 123 S. Main, Lucas.

The free program is made possible by the Kansas Humanities Council.

A reception will follow Townley’s reading.

The one2one space will have a collaborative group exhibition on display titled “Pop-Machine” with works from current Visiting Artist Rebecca Parks-Ramage, Artist in Residence Director Peter Max Lawrence and Evelyn Wray of Luray, Kan.

Wyatt Townley is a widely published, nationally known poet and a fourth-generation Kansan.

Her work has been featured on National Public Radio’s “The Writer’s Almanac” with Garrison Keillor, in US Poet Laureate Emeritus Ted Kooser’s “American Life in Poetry” column, and published in journals ranging from “The Paris Review” to “Newsweek.”

She has published three collections of poetry: “The Breathing Field” (Little Brown), “Perfectly Normal” (The Smith), and “The Afterlives of Trees” (Woodley Press), which is a Kansas Notable Book and winner of the Nelson Poetry Book Award.

A founding board member of The Writers Place in Kansas City, Missouri, Townley has served as a teaching artist with Young Audiences and Writers in the Schools program, and has appeared at writers’ conferences and literary festivals in the Midwest and Northeast.

For more information about Townley’s visit in Lucas, call the one2one at (913)-449-8869 or email [email protected].

FHSU announces six new members to be inducted into Tiger Sports Hall of Fame

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Athletics will enshrine six new members into the Tiger Sports Hall of Fame on Saturday, October 25, 2014. The six inductees include Mike Allen (football), Gene Fleharty (contributor), Lonnie Gee (cross country/track & field), Nathaniel Rollins (men’s basketball), Daryl Stockstill (men’s basketball), and Vandora Wilson (track & field). The induction ceremony will take place the morning of October 25 at the Memorial Union Ballroom on the campus of Fort Hays State University at 10 am. The inductees will also be recognized at halftime of the football game vs. Northwest Missouri State at 2 pm.

FHSU-HOF-Mike AllenMike Allen
A native of Denver, Colo., Allen was a member of the FHSU football team from 1987 to 1990. He was a two-time All-American for the Tigers, earning an honorable mention selection as a junior at defensive back in 1989 and a first team selection at linebacker as a senior in 1990. He was a three-time All-District 10 selection, twice at defensive back and once at linebacker. Allen also excelled in the classroom, earning CoSIDA Academic All-American honors his senior year. Allen was also a two-time all-conference first team selection, earning the honors as a junior in the final year with the CSIC and as a senior in the first year with the RMAC. Allen continues to hold the career record for interceptions at FHSU with 14, recording 13 of those over his final three years. He was the team leader in tackles in 1989 with 82 and interceptions in 1988 and 1989 with four each year.

 

 

FHSU-HOF-Gene FlehartyEugene Fleharty
Eugene Fleharty has been constant supporter of Fort Hays State Athletics both in service and financially for over 50 years. Eugene and his wife, Jo Ann, are members of Fort Hays State’s Difference Makers. They were major contributors for several of the recent improvements at Tiger Stadium (softball) on the campus of Fort Hays State University. He has served as the official scorekeeper at Fort Hays State home basketball games for over 50 consecutive years, a role he still serves in to this present day. Fleharry was an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Fort Hays State University from 1962-1999. He was chair of the Department of Biological Sciences for 11 of his 37 years as a professor at FHSU.

 

 

FHSu-HOF-Lonnie GeeLonnie Gee
Lonnie Gee, native of Iuka, Kan., was a four-time All-America performer for the Tigers in cross country/track and field. He was an All-American performer for the FHSU cross country team in 1980, helping the Tigers to a fourth-place finish in the nation that year. He joined J.P. Worcester as the Tigers’ two All-Americans on that year’s squad. He was also the 1978 District 10 Champion in cross country, but just missed All-American honors that year at the national meet. He owns the second-fastest 1500 meter time in FHSU history behind only John Mason for track and field. He was a three-time All-America performer in indoor track and field for FHSU, along with multiple all-conference and all-district honors.

 

FHSU-HOF-Nate RollinsNate Rollins
Rollins was a two-time All-America selection for Fort Hays State in men’s basketball, playing two years from 1982 to 1984. The Detroit, Mich., native earned third-team honors in 1983 and first-team honors in 1984, helping Fort Hays State to its first national championship as a senior. He earned All-NAIA Tournament Team honors that year as well. He was the CSIC Player of the Year in 1982-83 as a junior. As a senior in 1983-84, he averaged 17.9 points and 7.9 rebounds per game, and as a junior he averaged a double-double of 20.2 points and 11.7 rebounds per game. He was a first-team all-conference selection in each of his years as a Tiger. He is 10th on the all-time scoring list at FHSU in just two years played with 1,229 points, scoring 565 points as a junior and 664 as a senior. He averaged 18.9 points per game in his career, which is tied for fifth-best all-time at FHSU, and 9.6 rebounds per game. He shot 62.1 percent from the floor as a senior, which is the 10th-best single season mark by a Tiger. His 11.7 rebounds per game as a junior is fifth-best in a single season at FHSU.

 

 

FHSU-HOF-Daryl StockstillDaryl Stockstill
A native of Geneseo, Kan., Stockstill was an NAIA All-American selection for the Tigers in his senior year of 1970-71. Stockstill averaged a double-double that season with 18.2 points and 11.0 rebounds per game in 26 games played. He shot 48 percent from the field and 76.7 percent (133 free-throws made, 7th-most in a single season) at the free-throw line that year. As a junior in 1969-70, Stockstill also averaged a double-double of 19.1 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, shooting 51.3 percent from the field and 77.7 percent at the free-throw line (132 free-throws made, 8th-most in a single season). His 265 career made free-throws and 343 attempted free-throws ranks 9th all-time in school history. His 11.5 rebounds per game is sixth-best for a single season in FHSU history. His 18.7 points per game average over his two years ranks sixth-best for a career at FHSU and added 11.3 rebounds per game in his career. He was a two-time All-RMAC and NAIA All-District 10 1st Team selection. He was a two-year letterwinner for FHSU after transferring from Hutchinson Community College.

 

 

FHSU-HOF-Vandora WilsonVandora Wilson
Wilson was a six-time All-America performer in women’s track and field as a thrower. A native of Topeka, Kan., she was a national runner-up individually four times. In 1981, she finished second nationally in the shot put and third in the discus. In 1982, she was second nationally in shot put during the indoor season, and second nationally in the discus during the outdoor season. As a senior in 1983, she finished third nationally in the shot put during indoor season, and then second nationally in the discus during outdoor season. She still to this day owns the school record in the discus at 156′ 9″, a record that has now stood for 32 years. It is now the oldest standing women’s outdoor record at Fort Hays State.

KFIX Rock News: AC/DC Releases Track List, Album Art For “Rock Or Bust”

ACDCRockorBust_100714Two weeks after AC/DC announced the forthcoming release of their new album, Rock or Bust, we now have a track listing.

The band’s studio follow-up to 2008’s Black Ice will feature 11 tracks, one of which we’ve already heard: “Play Ball” has been featured in Turner Sports’ coverage of postseason Major League Baseball since the end of last month.

Rock or Bust is scheduled for a December 2 release, but if you order it now, you’ll score an instant digital download of “Play Ball.”

In addition to digital, Rock or Bust will be available on CD and vinyl.  You may want to grab a copy of one or both: the album’s cover features a 3-D image that gives the illusion of the AC/DC logo exploding when you move the cover in different directions. You can see the cover now on AC/DC’s official website.

Sadly, Rock or Bust will be the first album in AC/DC’s 41-year history not to feature founding guitarist Malcolm Young, who has retired from the band after being diagnosed with dementia.

Stevie Young — Malcolm and Angus Young’s nephew — stands in for his ailing uncle on the album, and will also do so on the road. A tour’s expected sometime next year.

Here’s the Rock or Bust track listing:

“Rock or Bust”
“Play Ball”
“Rock the Blues Away”
“Miss Adventure”
“Dogs of War”
“Got Some Rock & Roll Thunder”
“Hard Times”
“Baptism by Fire”
“Rock the House”
“Sweet Candy”
“Emission Control”

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Ellis Homecoming activities continue through the week

ellishomecoming2014
Queen candidates: Olivia Reiter, daughter of Allan and Lisa Reiter; Sarah Mick, daughter of Perry and Maria Mick; Baylee Werth, daughter of Rodney and Cristi Werth. King candidates: Sean Lee, son of Ed and Rhonda Lee; Jared Pfeifer, son of Sheldon and April Pfeifer; Brandon Groff, son of Travis and Trish Groff.

ELLIS — Homecoming Week activities continue in Ellis through Saturday.

A bonfire is scheduled to begin at 8:15 p.m. Thursday at the fairgrounds. This year’s Homecoming theme is “Trash the Tribe.”

On Friday, a series of activities are planned, including the Ellis High School Student Council barbecue, powder puff games, and the parade and pep rally, scheduled to begin at 2:30 p.m. from Chrysler Park.

The festivities lead up to the booster club barbecue and Friday night Railer football game against Wichita County (Leoti). Kickoff is scheduled for 7 p.m.

Homecoming Week will wind down with the annual dance, scheduled for 8 to 11 p.m. Saturday.

Click the image to check out this year’s Ellis Homecoming royalty. The king and queen will be crowned at 6:30 p.m. Friday.

Missouri couple now dog owners after Royals win

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri man has fulfilled his girlfriend’s wish and adopted a 4-year-old corgi named Lucy after the Kansas City Royals’ win last week.

During the Sept. 30 wild card game, Katie Castan held a sign that said, “If we win, he’s buying me a puppy!” with a picture of a corgi. The Kansas City Royals beat Oakland Athletics, and Castan’s boyfriend, Joe Onofrio adopted Lucy this past weekend from a family.

Castan tells the Kansas City Star that Lucy’s middle name is Rally. She says it comes from the Royals rallying to win the game that launched them into the American League Division Series.

Castan says Lucy is already loving her walks in Mill Creek Park and is loving, but calm.

 

First Ebola patient diagnosed in the U.S. has died

EbolaDALLAS (AP) — A Dallas hospital spokesman says the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States has died.

Wendell Watson of Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital says Thomas Eric Duncan died Wednesday morning.

Duncan arrived in Dallas Sept. 20 from Liberia and fell ill a few days later. He was sent home after an initial visit to the emergency room, but taken back to the hospital Sept. 28 and has been kept in isolation ever since.

Others in Dallas could be in danger as officials try to contain the virus that has ravaged West Africa, killing thousands of people. Officials say 10 people had direct contact with Duncan while he was contagious.

DECA food drive aims for 12,000 items (VIDEO)

Hays High School DECA students help other volunteers sort donated foods for the Community Assistance Center Tuesday night.
Hays High School DECA students help other volunteers sort donated foods for the Community Assistance Center Tuesday night.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Volunteers from 20 community organizations went door to door in Hays Tuesday night gathering non-perishable foods for the Community Assistance Center.

Hays resident Megan Wilkerson set out a grocery bag of “canned corn, some yummy chicken Alfredo and tuna” on her porch Tuesday evening before leaving for a class.

Hays resident Megan Wilkerson sets out a bag of  donated food items for volunteers to collect.
Hays resident Megan Wilkerson sets out a bag of donated food items for volunteers to collect.

“I think everybody deserves to eat,” she said.

About an hour later, her donations were collected by youth volunteers from the United Methodist Church.

The annual “Trick or Treat So Others Can Eat” event is organized by the Hays High School DECA club. The students were posted at the Community Assistance Center where they helped unload donations and categorize food for placement on the pantry shelves.

“It’s one of our biggest food drives,” according to Community Assistance Center co-director Theresa Hill. She’s hopeful DECA reaches its goal of 12,000 items, about 300 more than last year. “It would carry us through spring.”

Volunteer Sondra "Swifty" Swift stocks the CAC pantry shelves with crackers.
CAC volunteer Sondra “Swifty” Swift stocks the CAC pantry shelves with crackers.

“The shelves have been really bare. Last May’s food drive by the local postal carriers brought in about half of what it usually does. We’ve had to buy a lot of food,” Hill said.

“We serve about 5,500 people a year here, averaging about 150 food orders a month:”

The Community Assistance Center, now in its 30th year, provides food for low-income Ellis County residents, including seniors and college students.

United Methodist Church volunteers for Trick or Treat So Others Can Eat
United Methodist Church volunteers collect food for Trick or Treat So Others Can Eat.

Victoria and Schoenchen also will have food drives this week.

The official collection count will be done at the end of the week

“Anyone whose house is missed, please drop by your donations,” Hill asked.

The Community Assistance Center, 12th and Oak, is open from 7 a.m. to noon weekdays.

High DECA has organized the event since 1985, according to DECA sponsor Shaina Prough.

Kansas officials pleased by federal agency’s delay

United states department of laborTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration is pleased that the federal government is delaying enforcement of rules extending minimum-wage and overtime protections to home-care workers.

The Republican governor publicly opposed the initiative from Democratic President Barack Obama’s administration set to take effect in January, saying it could increase costs of in-home services for the disabled and force them into institutions.

The U.S. Department of Labor announced Tuesday that it won’t enforce the new rules against employers for the first six months. Also, from June to December 2015, the agency said, it will consider enforcing the rules on a case-by-case basis.

Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services spokeswoman Angela DeRocha said the concerns of in-home care consumers in Kansas undoubtedly played a key role in the federal agency’s decision.

 

DA declines opinion on public suicide names

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas district attorney’s office has declined to issue an opinion on whether a local police department is violating the state’s open records law by refusing to release the names of people who kill themselves in public.

The Topeka Police Department says the public doesn’t need to know the identities of people like a woman who stepped in front of a train last year, or a man who ran in front of a semitrailer on Interstate 70. The Shawnee County District Attorney’s Office says that explanation is good enough to exempt the information under the Kansas Open Records Act.

Assistant Shawnee County District Attorney Todd Hiatt tells The Topeka Capital-Journal that if media outlets disagree with the policy, they are free to file a lawsuit to challenge it.

News From the Oil Patch

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By JOHN P. TRETBAR
October 6th, 2014

Oil prices continued their free fall in early Monday trading. Mymex contracts lost another 74 cents per barrel at $89.00. London Brent was down 85 cents at $91.46/bbl. Friday’s closing price for Kansas Common at NCRA was $79.50 per barrel. The last time that price closed below $80 was on April 23rd of last year.

Saudi Aramco cut prices last week by about a dollar per barrel to Asia, and by 40 cents a barrel to the United States. That sends a strong signal that Saudi Arabia is more interested in maintaining market share than in defending prices.

Baker Hughes reported 1,922 active drilling rigs nationwide, which was down two from last Friday. Canada had 430, down one. The count in Kansas was 24, down one from last week. Independent Oil & Gas reported 125 active rigs in Kansas, 31 pending their next location assignment and 78 stacked or idle. There were 40 active rigs reported in eastern Kansas, up three, and 85 west of Wichita, down one.

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The Kansas Corporation Commission reported 622 new intent to drill notices during the month of September. That’s up from 588 in August and 574 in September of last year. There were ten intents filed in Barton County last month, 14 in Ellis County, 12 in Russell County and three in Stafford County.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reported 66 well completions last week, for a year-to-date total of 4,464 across Kansas. Last week there were 45 completions noted in eastern Kansas, and 21 west of Wichita.

There were 141 drilling permits issued for new locations in Kansas last week, bringing the total this year to 5,640. There were 89 new permits east of Wichita and 52 in western Kansas, including four in Ellis County and two in Russell County.

The president of Turkey insists that the fight against the Islamic State is his country’s top priority but there is growing evidence Turkey is helping Islamic State smuggle it’s oil. The Turkish Energy Minister says his country wouled never partake in any illegal transactions. There are no firm numbers for oil being smuggled from Syria, but in the first six months of this year, the Turks have seized more than 486,000 barrels of illicit crude.

AP and ABC are reporting on a big crackdown on oil smuggling along Turkey’s border with Syria. What used to be a lucrative sideline for the locals has become big business for Islamic State. authorities, smugglers and vendors say business was booming until about six months ago. when Turkish authorities ramped up a multi-layered crackdown to disrupt the illicit trade. According to the AP report, the Turks have beefed up border controls and arrested dozens of smugglers. They’re also reportedly going after consumers with an extensive stop-and-search operation on Turkish highways were fueld tanks are tested for smuggled oil.

The AP reports on a company called Energy Intelligence, whose president wants to expand the use of drone aircraft to monitor oil pipelines in North Dakota. Currently, pipelines are checked for problems by occasional manned aircraft flyovers, on-the-ground observations by foot or vehicle, and production loss reports…some use fiber-optic early warning systems. But experts say those methods still “pretty archaic,” and often leave underground spills undiscovered for days. The firm hopes to begin test flights this fall.

The state task force looking at Kansas earthquakes has submitted its action plan to Governor Brownback. The Seismic Action Plan consists of two major components – a plan for enhanced seismic monitoring and a response plan. The group recommends installation of a strategically-located permanent monitoring network, and a portable seismic array to provide a closer look at localized earthquakes. The report from Te Kansas Geological Survey, Kansas Department of Health and Environment and the Kansas Corporation Commission provides background from national studies linking seismic activity to fluid injection, but the task force says it has no conclusive evidence linking fluid injection to specific seismic events in Kansas. Thus far in 2014, the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Earthquake Information Center has recorded 58 earthquakes, ranging from magnitude 1.3 to 3.8, nearly all in Sumner, Harper, and Barber counties.

BP is challenging a federal judge’s finding of gross negligence in the Gulf Oil Spill, saying he based the ruling on expert testimony he said he wouldn’t consider. The ruling exposes the oil company to as much as $18 billion in fines. In court documents filed Thursday, the oil company asked the judge to change his finding or grant a new trial.

Do-it-yourself flu vaccine? Study shows it works

flu

A study suggests that do-it-yourself flu vaccine might be possible. Researchers found that military folks who squirted a nasal vaccine up their noses were as well-protected as others who got it from health workers.

The study leader says there is no reason that ordinary people could not be taught to give the vaccine, especially for children who might be less scared if they received it from mom or dad.

The study tested FluMist, the nasal vaccine, in more than 1,000 military members and their families over the last two flu seasons. Blood tests showed that immune responses were comparable regardless of who administered the vaccine.

Results will be reported later this week at a meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America and several other groups in Philadelphia.

Related: Or … HaysMed will offer free drive-through flu shots.

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