We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Kansas man hospitalized after truck rolls on icy overpass

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMWICHITA- A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 7:30 a.m. on Saturday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Dodge truck driven by Daniel S. Spackman, 56, Wichita, was eastbound on Kansas 254 at Hillside. The driver lost control on the icy overpass. The truck slid into the median and rolled.

Spackman was transported to Wesley Medical Center. Two teenage passengers were not injured.

The KHP reported Spackman was not wearing a seat belt.

USDA Listens to Producers, Will Not Create New Beef Checkoff Program

USDAMANHATTAN, KAN. – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) – a member of the Senate Appropriations Agriculture Subcommittee – today welcomed the news that U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack will not move forward with the creation of a new beef checkoff program under the Commodity Promotion, Research and Information Act of 1996. Last month, Sen. Moran sent a letter to Sec. Vilsack expressing his deep concern with USDA creating a new checkoff under the 1996 Act against the wishes of cattle producers.

“I am pleased that USDA will not move forward with the creation of a new beef checkoff,” Sen. Moran said. “Changes to the beef checkoff should be supported by producers, not forced upon them administratively by the federal government. I appreciate that Secretary Vilsack listened to the voices of cattle producers from across the country who clearly objected to a new checkoff.”

Last month, Sen. Moran called on Sec. Vilsack to listen to feedback from producers in Kansas and across the country who have real concerns about the creation of a new beef checkoff under the Commodity Promotion, Research and Information Act of 1996.

“Cattlemen have been loud and clear in their objections to a new beef checkoff,” Sen. Moran said when he sent his November letter to Sec. Vilsack. “I am deeply concerned that USDA is ignoring the voices of producers.”

Holthus Hotline with the “Voice of the Chiefs” Mitch Holthus

Mitch takes a look back at the Chiefs win over Oakland and looks ahead to Sunday’s big game at Pittsburgh. The Holthus Hotline can be heard every Saturday during the Chiefs season at 8:30am on KFIX (96.9-FM).

Sunday’s game is at noon with the pregame show at 11am on KFIX.

Part 1

 

Part 2

 

 

Lawsuit filed to stop legalization of pot

MarijuanaLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska and Oklahoma are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to declare Colorado’s legalization of marijuana unconstitutional.

Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning announced this week that the states are seeking a court order to prevent Colorado from enforcing a measure that was approved by voters in 2012. Bruning says Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt is also a party to the lawsuit.

The complaint alleges that Colorado’s Amendment 64 runs afoul of federal law.

Washington state also has legalized marijuana, but Bruning says Nebraska isn’t suing over that law because it doesn’t share a border with Washington.

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers says in a statement that the lawsuit is without merit. He says his office will vigorously defend the marijuana law in the U.S. Supreme Court.

Eggs & Issues may find new home in new Ellis Co. Administrative Center

el co admin center signBy BECKY KISER
Hays Post

While the relocation to the former NEW building of the Ellis County Law Enforcement Center and the courts is temporary, the move to the new Ellis County Administration Center, 718 Main, is permanent for other offices.

County Administrator Greg Sund has suggested an idea to help residents become more familiar with the building and help the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce find a new location for its “Eggs and Issues” legislative series.

Sund will ask county commissioners during Monday night’s evening about providing the Administration Center’s basement meeting room for the annual spring forums with area state legislators.

“I had a discussion with HACC Director Tammy Wellbrock about holding the meetings in the new building’s meeting room. They sometimes have difficulty in finding locations. I’ll make sure the county commissioners have no objection,” he said.

The three or four Eggs and Issues breakfasts are held Saturday mornings so there’s “no conflict with county needs for that space,” according to Sund.

“I think it would be a good way to get the public into the building and get people familiar with it and what some of the services are in it.”

Most county administrative offices located in the courthouse will move to the new administrative center, leaving the courthouse as a law enforcement/judicial center.

Now That’s Rural: Mike Frisbie, Frisbie Construction

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

Culbertson, Nebraska. A state-of-the-art grain handling facility is being installed, with the capacity to unload 105 railroad cars at a time. The innovative construction company which is installing this new grain handling facility is found in rural Kansas.

Mike Frisbie is president and chairman of the board of Frisbie Construction, the company that is building this new facility. The company began in 1949 when Mike’s father George Frisbie came back to his hometown of Gypsum after World War II. George started building houses with carpenter’s hand tools and a wheelbarrow.

In 1954, at the request of a friend in Salina, George Frisbie built a concrete slip form elevator in Gypsum. That would make the elevator 60 years old. Is it still standing? “I can see it through my office door,” Mike Frisbie said.

In fact, it went so well that Frisbie Construction now specializes solely in building and remodelling elevators for the grain trade. Mike studied electronics and worked for other companies before joining the family business. He became president and chairman when George retired in 1992.

The business has grown and changed. “When I got started, a machine which could move 8,000 bushels per hour was a big piece of equipment,” Mike said. “Now we are moving 50 to 70,000 bushels per hour. “Our customers may have only 36 to 48 hours to sample and weigh a bunch of grain cars.”

Frisbie Construction has designed new products to assist in that process. One is the Frisbie swivel rail loadout spout, which is like a series of funnels to direct the flow of grain. Another is the Frisbie unloading augur, which is a tubular augur that controls grain flow. Systems have become automated and computer-controlled. Bearings now have monitors, for example, so a technician can identify problems immediately.

“We build new elevators and we speed up old ones,” Mike said. “If you’re selling grain, you need to move it more quickly. If you’re storing grain, you need more storage.” Either way, Frisbie Construction can help.

Frisbie Construction maintains a manufacturing plant to build new or hard-to-find replacement parts. “We are one of two companies that do 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week emergency repair,” Mike said.

Today Frisbie Construction serves primarily a five-state region centered on Kansas. The company maintains 11 crews of two to four people who travel to jobs in the region. “My crews are here at 7 a.m. Monday and are back late Friday,” Mike said.

Along the way, the company has learned lessons for success. “My dad said, ‘take care of the customers and take care of the employees,’” Mike said.  In one of the early years, a crew took a brand new pickup truck to a jobsite and proceeded to damage the truck by overloading it on its very first time out. Ouch.

“After that we made a commitment to owning our own cranes and getting the equipment we need,” Mike said. “We want our employees to work smarter and longer. Safety is a big part of what we do.”

He also recalls a time when there was a steel shortage. Frisbie Construction had an exclusive relationship with one particular supplier who could not get steel, even though it was available otherwise. “Now we work with all dealers,” Mike said. “Our goal is to build the proper elevator for the customer, not a particular brand we might be trying to sell.”

Some employees have been with the company for 30 or 40 years. The company is jointly owned by family and employees. “We’ve had a great run of good people here,” Mike said. It’s great to see a business thrive in a rural community like Gypsum, population 409 people. Now, that’s rural.  For more information, go to www.frisbieinc.com.

It’s time to leave Culbertson, Nebraska where a new grain handling facility is being installed by an innovative company from rural Kansas. We salute Mike Frisbie and all those involved with Frisbie Construction for making a difference with entrepreneurship in the grain handling industry.  They have demonstrated how rural America can gain by handling grain.

Sneak exercise into your holiday activities

Linda Beech
Linda Beech

With the holiday hustle and bustle requiring so much of your precious time, how can you find opportunities to walk throughout your day to reach your goal of 10,000 steps? There are ways to search out those elusive minutes for movement. They are scattered throughout your morning, afternoon and evening, but with a little ingenuity and thought, these tiny spurts of time can add up to extra steps and more holiday calories burned.

Here are 10 smart, practical and easy tips that can help you stay active during this busy– and calorie-laden– time of year:

1. Wear a Pedometer.  Get a pedometer or add a pedometer app to your mobile phone and use it every day. This inexpensive tool is a terrific motivator. It helps you keep up with exactly how much you are actually moving. Being able to monitor your movement will help you to move even more. Try adding 500 extra steps the next day. This is equivalent to about 5 minutes of steady walking.

2.  Do Your Chores on Foot: Resist the urge to delegate household tasks which involve walking, such as getting the mail, walking the dog, taking out the trash, or simply fetching something from the car. Asking the kids or your spouse to do it may seem quicker and easier sometimes, but it doesn’t help your pedometer reach its goal!

3. Decorate with Added Steps: When putting up and taking down the Christmas tree and other seasonal decorations, leave the box of trinkets and ornaments on the opposite side of the room. Walk to the box for each item then back to where it will go. All that back and forth really adds up.

4. Cook on the Move: While cooking or baking those delectable holiday treats, consider jogging or marching in place while the timer ticks away.  An added plus– this will burn some of the calories you might gain from sampling your products.

5. Park Far Away When Shopping: Not only do you add steps going back and forth, you are saving time not having to search for a space AND you will save your car from being bumped by carts or other car doors.

6. Move in the Morning. Make sure your exercise time isn’t eaten up by daily surprises. Get up a few minutes earlier each day, stretch and take a few deep breaths. Then walk or jog in place, even if only for a few minutes. You’ll wake up quickly and log a few hundred steps at the  start of your day.

7. Walk Through Those Holiday Shows: Forgo the recliner as you watch your favorite holiday TV programs. Move during your movie instead. Pace around your living room while keeping an eye on the screen, or walk or jog in place. Two hours will pass quickly and that can add up to several thousand steps. Not up for two solid hours of moving? Vow to move the first few minutes of each show and during commercials.

8. Pace on the Phone: Pace through the house as you enjoy a chat on the phone. Steps add up when you form this simple habit. This is another example of using hidden minutes. Commit to move during your next telephone calls.

9. Stand Through Your Sit-Down Tasks: Make it a point to stand as you fold laundry, go through the mail, or write out your bills. You’ll find you can add many steps to your overall day this way. Then when the laundry needs to be put away and the bills put in the box outside – don’t delegate those duties! Think of them as a few more chances to reach your steps or miles goal for that day.

10. Work to the Beat.  Turn on some great fast music while you cook, clean or manage other chores. Feel your mood instantly lift and get more movement out of your tasks.  Time flies when you are listening to enjoyable music.

A century ago, without all our modern conveniences, a person didn’t need to make extra time for exercise. Moving was just a given. Now, however, with all our time-saving contraptions and sedentary jobs, we have to include exercise in our day. It has to become and remain a priority on your own to-do list.

There are hundreds of flexible minutes in our day for extra steps; we only have to look to find them. As you rush around handling all the last-minute details of the holidays, be sure to make time for your health, too, even if it is in small increments. Then as the colder, winter days pass and the bright, new days of spring approach, your fitter, more energetic body will thank you.

Linda K. Beech is Ellis County Extension Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences.

FHSU joins alternative-credit consortium for non-traditional students

FHSUFHSU UNIVERSITY RELATIONS

Fort Hays State University has signed an agreement with ACE, the American Council on Education, to join 24 other colleges and universities in an alternative credit consortium as part of an innovative initiative to create a more flexible pathway toward a college degree for millions of nontraditional learners.

The 25 institutions serving in this pilot project have agreed to identify the criteria, quality and sources of potential alternative credit courses sought by students who successfully complete courses that are part of a selected pool of about 100 low-cost or no-cost lower division general education online courses.

ace_logo_2FHSU President Mirta M. Martin signed the contract with ACE on Dec. 17.

“FHSU is built on providing access to quality learning experiences,” said Dennis King, director of the Virtual College and learning technologies. “Our involvement in this program will allow us to stay on the cutting edge of course design, delivery and articulation.”

The participating institutions represent four-year and two-year, public and private, non-profit and for-profit colleges and universities that have a strong commitment to access and attainment and serving nontraditional learners. They are:

American Public University; Capella University; Central Michigan University; Charter Oak State College; Colorado Community College System; Colorado Technical University; East Carolina University; Fayetteville State University; Goodwin College; John F. Kennedy University; Kaplan University; Lakeland College; Metropolitan State University of Denver; National Louis University; Northern Arizona University; Northwestern State University; Notre Dame College; SUNY Empire State College; Texas Woman’s University; Thomas Edison State College; University of Baltimore; University of Maryland University College; University of Memphis; University of North Carolina.

Participating institutions have agreed to provide anonymized data to ACE regarding the amount of credit their institution accepts, as well as progress and success rates of students transferring in courses through this project. Additional college, university and system partners will be recruited in fall 2015.

This initiative is made possible through a $1.89 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Its initial focus will be on the more than 31 million adults who have completed some postsecondary coursework but lack a degree or credential. Many of these students represent first-generation, low-income students, so findings from this investment likely will apply to younger students from this population, as well.

“The institutions serving in this pilot project will play a valuable role in helping enhance the work we have been doing for many years in developing quality mechanisms for determining the credit worthiness of education, training and life experiences outside of a formal higher education classroom setting,” said ACE President Molly Corbett Broad. “We very much appreciate this generous investment and the commitment it represents to the effort to provide a more flexible and cost-efficient way to increase the number of Americans able to gain a college degree or credential.”

As an additional part of the effort, ACE will expand its current work in the area of college credit recommendations by developing a quality framework and guidelines for issuing recommendations for digital micro-credentials, competency-based programs, and non-degree certificate programs.

“This project will yield multiple and long-lasting benefits to the participating institutions, the wider higher education community and potentially millions of nontraditional learners,” said Deborah Seymour, ACE assistant vice president for education attainment and innovation. “It will help lead to the greater acceptance of alternative forms of credit in a way that ensures quality and encourages more people to complete their post-secondary education.”

5 ways to make your email safer in case of a hack attack

emailTAMI ABDOLLAH, Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Sony hack, the latest in a wave of company security breaches, exposed months of employee emails. Other hacks have given attackers access to sensitive information about a company and its customers, such as credit-card numbers and email addresses. One way hackers can sneak into a company is by sending fake emails with malicious links to employee inboxes. Here are five simple steps to make your email more secure and limit the harm a hacker can have:

ARCHIVE EARLY AND OFTEN

Most corporate email systems allow people to set up regularly scheduled archiving so that emails are moved off of the server after a certain number of days. You can still check archived emails on your work computer, but they are no longer easily accessible on websites outside the office or on your phone. That limits hackers’ ability to access those emails too. You can make exceptions for emails that you want to keep in your active inbox, and they won’t be archived.

GET ORGANIZED

As emails come into your inbox, deal with them. Sort them into folders. This segments your data, requiring an attacker to know which folder to go to, or to take multiple steps to search for wanted information. Paired with archiving, it also ensures that what the hacker does compromise is limited and known for any future damage assessment. Sensitive information can also be removed from your inbox. For example, delete an email and save what you need to your hard drive or an external drive.

KEEP WORK AND PERSONAL EMAILS SEPARATE

Don’t use your work email for personal email or activities online. That limits details a hacker can glean about you to conduct more sophisticated attacks targeting you as the entryway into your company’s system. For example, hackers can learn about your shopping habits or personal hobbies and use those to send a phishing email that appears to come from websites you bought goods from or read frequently. Phishing messages route you to a fake address and allow hackers to gain access to your system.

DON’T CLICK ON UNEXPECTED LINKS AND ATTACHMENTS

If you receive an email with a link or attachment you weren’t expecting, send the person a separate email asking whether the first email was legitimate. For links from companies such as banking institutions, hover your cursor over the hyperlink or right-click to show the link’s final destination. Before you click, make sure the address that pops up when you hover over the link matches where the hyperlink says you’ll be sent. If unsure, use a new window and physically type in the website’s address to conduct your business.

IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING

If your email is acting up or a link or attachment strikes you as strange, forward it to your IT department as quickly as possible. Your attention and fast response may prevent someone else at your company from making a mistake.

Flu season, early again, hitting hard in South and Midwest

CDC flu map week of Dec. 13- Click to enlarge
CDC flu map week of Dec. 13- Click to enlarge

MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials say the flu is now hitting hard in parts of the country, especially the South and Midwest.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday reported cases were widespread in 29 states last week. If the trend continues, it could bring another early peak to the flu season as happened in the last two winters.

Experts worry this will be a bad season because the dominant strain — seen in roughly two-thirds of recent tests — is a nasty bug not covered in this year’s vaccine. But officials have not seen an unusually high number of hospitalizations or deaths so far.

Flu season traditionally peaks around February. But in the last two winters, flu peaked by early January.

US agriculture has big appetite for Cuba trade

wheat harvestSTEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — U.S. agriculture has a big appetite for freer trade with Cuba. From wheat to rice to beans, the industry stands to be a big beneficiary of President Barack Obama’s plan to ease economic and travel restrictions imposed against the communist-ruled island.

Agricultural exports are among the few exceptions to the U.S. trade embargo, but they’re subject to cumbersome rules. Latin American and Asian countries with fewer restrictions and easier financing have gained market share.

Sales of U.S. agricultural products to Cuba peaked at over $710 million in 2008, but fell to $350 million by 2013. Frozen chicken, soybeans and soy products, and corn are the main products Cuba buys from the United States.

Wheat and rice growers see new opportunities. Cuba hasn’t bought U.S. wheat or rice for several years.

Area High School Scoreboard for 12/19

High School Scoreboard WhitmoreBOYS’ BASKETBALL
Area Scores
Thomas More Prep-Marian 77, Oakley 40
Ellis 51, Ellinwood 47
Otis-Bison 66, LaCrosse 44
Ness City 68, Kinsley 45
St. John 90, Cunningham 24
Norton 58, Smith Center 29
Stockton 75, Plainville 63
Dundy County-Stratton, Neb. 78, St. Francis 48
Natoma 58, Thunder Ridge 39
Lincoln 45, Wilson 30
Logan 61, Palco 30
Hoxie 76, Rawlins County 33
Hoisington 56, Pratt 53
Osborne 81, Tescott 41
Wallace County 63, Dighton 38
Republic County 53, Russell 42

Statewide Scores
Abilene 67, Concordia 58
Andale 60, Circle 57
Andover Central 58, Valley Center 36
Attica 52, Oxford 25
Axtell 71, Clifton-Clyde 44
Beloit 78, Ellsworth 50
Berean Academy 72, Peabody-Burns 42
Blue Valley Southwest 53, Gardner-Edgerton 35
Buhler 62, Augusta 46
Burlington 46, Fredonia 17
Canton-Galva 74, Burrton 68
Centralia 56, Linn 42
Cheney 53, Conway Springs 31
Derby 57, Hutchinson 40
Elkhart 70, Cimarron 54
Ell-Saline 51, Little River 49
Emporia 58, Topeka 53
Fort Scott 48, Chanute 39
Goddard-Eisenhower 62, Dodge City 61
Hanover 57, Onaga 40
Hartford 48, Burlingame 35
Hesston 72, Kingman 45
Highland Park 63, Topeka West 52
Hillsboro 74, Remington 48
Holton 56, Riverside 44
Hutchinson Central Christian 61, Inman 48
Independence 52, Pittsburg 43, OT
Jackson Heights 68, Oskaloosa 41
Jefferson West 71, Atchison County 34
Kapaun Mount Carmel 86, Wichita Northwest 62
KC Piper 83, Bonner Springs 78
Larned 46, Lyons 42
Lawrence 39, Lawrence Free State 33
Lebo 53, Madison 28
Liberal 53, Perryton, Texas 36
Lyndon 60, Herington 28
Maize South 66, Arkansas City 30
Manhattan 84, Junction City 61
Marysville 71, Chapman 64
Meade 63, Wichita County 21
Minneola 56, Pawnee Heights 31
Moundridge 48, Pretty Prairie 46
Nemaha Central 72, Perry-Lecompton 52
Newton 52, Goddard 39
Northeast-Arma 59, Chetopa 31
Norwich 44, South Haven 32
Olathe North 68, SM Northwest 55
Olpe 70, Waverly 53
Osawatomie 61, Anderson County 34
Ottawa 63, DeSoto 35
Paola 48, Spring Hill 46
Pike Valley 58, Sylvan-Lucas 51
Pleasant Ridge 59, McLouth 51
Rock Creek 46, Wabaunsee 30
Rossville 66, Frankfort 52
Royal Valley 63, Santa Fe Trail 52
Rural Vista 38, Goessel 31
Sabetha 63, Hiawatha 28
Salina Sacred Heart 46, Minneapolis 39
Salina South 57, Salina Central 41
Scott City 59, Hugoton 54
Shawnee Heights 62, Washburn Rural 48
Silver Lake 57, St. Mary’s 48
South Central 58, Hodgeman County 30
Southwestern Hts. 65, Syracuse 46
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 50, Rock Hills 32
Sterling 49, Nickerson 35
Topeka Hayden 56, Topeka Seaman 31
Troy 94, BV Randolph 37
Udall 58, Caldwell 50
Ulysses 67, Goodland 56
Valley Heights 87, Doniphan West 85, 3OT
Wamego 59, Clay Center 30
Washington County 81, Wetmore 26
Wellsville 73, Central Heights 50
West Elk 58, Central Burden 36
West Franklin 70, Council Grove 59
Winfield 59, Rose Hill 52

GIRL’S BASKETBALL
Area Scores
Thomas More Prep-Marian 67, Oakley 17
Ellinwood 46, Ellis 35
Ness City 74, Kinsley 56
LaCrosse 51, Otis-Bison 21
Logan 46, Palco 26
Macksville 46, Stafford 18
Plainville 65, Stockton 50
Smith Center 50, Norton 31
Republic County 53, Russell 48
Thunder Ridge 54, Natoma 18
Dighton 44, Wallace County 21
Hoxie 83, Rawlins County 15
Quinter 52, Greeley County 26
Trego 40, Oberlin-Decatur 39

Statewide Scores
Abilene 61, Concordia 57
Andale 59, Circle 40
Anderson County 40, Osawatomie 17
Andover Central 68, Valley Center 19
Atchison 37, KC Christian 31
Atchison County 51, Jefferson West 50
Axtell 57, Clifton-Clyde 21
Beloit 60, Ellsworth 29
Berean Academy 47, Peabody-Burns 19
Blue Valley Southwest 55, Gardner-Edgerton 43
Bonner Springs 40, KC Piper 37
Bucklin 33, Kiowa County 24
Buhler 63, Augusta 27
Cair Paravel 57, Whitefield Academy, Ga. 29
Caldwell 36, Udall 19
Canton-Galva 50, Burrton 29
Central Burden 55, West Elk 27
Centre 58, Wakefield 30
Chapman 52, Marysville 40
Chase County 52, Osage City 17
Cimarron 64, Elkhart 41
Conway Springs 39, Cheney 36
Council Grove 54, West Franklin 29
Dodge City 41, Goddard-Eisenhower 38
Dundy County-Stratton, Neb. 70, St. Francis 27
Emporia 65, Topeka 28
Erie 50, Oswego 29
Frankfort 46, Rossville 34
Goessel 45, Rural Vista 23
Golden Plains 49, Weskan 17
Goodland 62, Ulysses 50
Hanover 57, Onaga 40
Hartford 33, Burlingame 29
Haven 39, Marion 27
Hesston 43, Kingman 31
Hiawatha 62, Sabetha 37
Highland Park 61, Topeka West 53
Holton 58, Riverside 16
Hugoton 87, Scott City 35
Hutchinson 49, Derby 47, 2OT
Inman 49, Hutchinson Central Christian 24
Jackson Heights 55, Oskaloosa 19
Kapaun Mount Carmel 47, Wichita Northwest 15
Lakeside 52, Chase 38
Lawrence Free State 59, Lawrence 47
Liberal 56, Perryton, Texas 30
Madison 41, Lebo 37
Maize 47, Wichita Campus 33
Maize South 53, Arkansas City 45
Manhattan 99, Junction City 53
Marais des Cygnes Valley 61, Southern Coffey 41
Meade 69, Wichita County 22
Minneapolis 51, Salina Sacred Heart 14
Minneola 56, Pawnee Heights 15
Nemaha Central 54, Perry-Lecompton 23
Newton 58, Goddard 30
Paola 65, Spring Hill 20
Pike Valley 57, Sylvan-Lucas 46
Pittsburg 58, Independence 47
Pleasant Ridge 44, McLouth 31
Pratt 42, Hoisington 31
Remington 51, Hillsboro 30
Royal Valley 66, Santa Fe Trail 38
Salina Central 43, Salina South 29
Shawnee Heights 55, Washburn Rural 49
Silver Lake 53, St. Mary’s 41
Smoky Valley 35, Halstead 28
South Barber 52, Argonia 37
South Central 60, Hodgeman County 22
South Haven 52, Norwich 44
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 59, Rock Hills 34
St. Paul 62, Riverton 35
Sterling 72, Nickerson 32
Sublette 74, Satanta 51
Topeka Hayden 56, Topeka Seaman 31
Troy 53, BV Randolph 38
Valley Falls 48, Jefferson North 11
Valley Heights 58, Doniphan West 29
Wabaunsee 63, Rock Creek 27
Wamego 42, Clay Center 31
Washington County 45, Wetmore 36
Waverly 60, Olpe 44
Wellington 53, Mulvane 26
Wellsville 33, Central Heights 30, OT
Wheatland-Grinnell 52, Northern Valley 37
Wichita Collegiate 43, Clearwater 23
Wichita Home School 49, Sedgwick 42
Wichita Independent 53, Bluestem 29
Wichita North 63, Wichita West 20
Wichita South 71, Wichita East 24
Wichita Trinity 45, Douglass 41
Winfield 47, Rose Hill 34

Hilltop Hoops Classic
Ell-Saline 50, Little River 24

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File