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Nearly $100K in bonds for suspect in Barton Co. combine chase

Lamb- photo Barton Co. Sheriff
Lamb- photo Barton Co. Sheriff

GREAT BEND – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County set the bond for the man who stole a combine Tuesday night and led law enforcement on a chase throughout Ellinwood.

Kenneth Lamb, 37, Ellinwood was booked at the Barton County Jail for felony theft with a bond set for $50,000, two counts of aggravated assault on law enforcement, DUI, felony criminal damage to property, and reckless driving with a bond set at $40,000, and a charge of felony criminal damage to property with a bond set at $5,000.

Lamb stole the combine Tuesday evening and took law enforcement on a chase around Ellinwood causing damage to several power poles, a pickup, and law enforcement vehicles.\

Combine chase on Tuesday night- photo Barton Co. Sheriff
Combine chase on Tuesday night- photo Barton Co. Sheriff

After firing approximately 18 rounds at the implement, the Ellinwood Police Department and the Barton County Sheriff’s Office were able to disable the combine and arrest Lamb.

Huelskamp statement on Pope Francis’ historic address

Office of Rep. Tim Huelskamp

WASHINGTON – Following Pope Francis’ address the joint session of Congress, Congressman Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., released the following statement:

“My family and I were blessed to hear from Pope Francis yesterday and today. He’s inspired us to continue fighting for our beliefs rooted in the clear teachings of our Catholic faith, especially the sanctity of life, marriage, family, and religious liberty. George Washington reminded us in his farewell address that national morality cannot prevail in exclusion of religious principle. I am praying Francis’ visit inspires Catholics and non-Catholics alike to return to our nation’s founding principles and reliance on our Heavenly Father.”

As one of the only two members of Congress to attend Catholic seminary, Huelskamp has been inspired by his Catholic to defend the unborn, restore traditional marriage, and protect religious liberty. He also has first-hand experience navigating the U.S. immigration system after having gone through the process for two of his adopted children.

Driver charged with sexual assault of disabled Kan. woman

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Kansas City transport van driver has been ordered to stand trial in the sexual molestation of a young woman who is developmentally disabled.

The Kansas City Star reports that 74-year-old Terry Mize Curry was bound over for trial Wednesday on the felony charge of aggravated sexual battery after waiving his preliminary hearing.

Johnson County court documents say that surveillance video captured Curry sexually assaulting a 20-year-old woman last September. The woman was a participant in a program for young adults with special needs operated by the Olathe school district. Curry was a driver for the company that contracted with the school district to provide transportation.

The charge says the woman was unable to give consent to sexual contact because of “mental deficiency or disease.”

HPD Activity Log Sept. 23

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hpd actvity log sponsor hess bittel fletcher

The Hays Police Department responded to 6 animal calls and 9 traffic stops Wed., Sept. 23, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Abandoned Vehicle–100 Block E 15th St, Hays; 4:37 AM
MV Accident-Private Property–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 9:03 AM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–500 block W 12th St, Hays; 2:58 AM
Bicycle – Lost,Found,Stolen–2500 block Vine St, Hays; 10:55 AM
Animal Cruelty/Neglect–1700 block Felten Dr, Hays; 11:53 AM
Drug Offenses–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 1:17 PM
Drug Offenses–1300 block Vine St, Hays; 3:45 PM; 4:35 PM
Animal At Large–300 block E 6th St, Hays; 3:48 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–2700 block Plaza Ave, Hays; 4:07 PM
Criminal Threat–300 block W 25th St, Hays; 8/6/15 12 PM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–700 block Oak St, Hays; 9:20 PM
Drug Offenses–500 block E 13th St, Hays; 9:40 PM; 11:53 PM

Massive electric generators to move through Hays streets

Goodman Engines - Press Release - Sept 2015
In this 2008 photo, massive generators destined for the Goodman Energy Center turn at the intersection of 27th and Vine. Three new generators are scheduled to make the same trip through Hays this Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Midwest Energy

Three massive electric generators are scheduled to make the slow journey from the Hays rail yard near Vine Street to the Goodman Energy Center in the coming days.

Plans call for the first 150-ton generator to make the trip Friday morning after 8 a.m., with another following on Saturday morning and the final engine following on Sunday.

Pilot vehicles will guide the generators up Vine Street and turn west on 27th Street. On 27th, they’ll travel to the US-183 bypass and over the I-70 bridge and continue north on 230th Avenue. Midwest Energy crews will raise power lines where needed along the route, to allow the generators to safely pass underneath.

Motorists on those roads during these times are asked to exercise extreme caution near the convoy. As the convoy moves at just above walking speed, drivers in a hurry should consider alternate routes.

The generators were manufactured in Europe by Finnish engine maker Wärtsilä. They arrived at the Port of Houston earlier this month, and traveled to Hays on rail cars. Valued at nearly $5 million each, they are the centerpiece of the $30 million expansion at the Goodman Energy Center north of Hays, which will see the plant’s capacity grow from 76 megawatts up to 102 megawatts, enough to power more than 15,000 homes. The expansion should be complete and operational in early 2016.

INSIGHT KANSAS: More voters, better representation

Voting does matter, just not mathematically. Only rarely does a single vote determine an election’s outcome. But overall, “Who votes?” can make all the difference.

For past few years, Secretary of State Kris Kobach has consistently made it more difficult to register and vote. But I don’t want to quibble about questionable allegations of penny-ante voting fraud and ill-considered policies to address these allegations.

Burdett Loomis
Burdett Loomis

Rather, I want to advocate as strongly as possible for pursuing a highly inclusive model of voting, to increase turnout and make our elections more representative of the views of all Kansans.

I suggest first that we work hard — really hard — at registering all potential voters, and especially those who turn 18 and become eligible to cast their first ballots.

Second, we should consider adopting a full-fledged vote-by-mail system, which makes it easier for voters to cast their ballots and saves money to boot.

Third, for all state and national legislative offices we should adopt a “top two” primary system, in which the two highest primary-election vote-getters face off in the general election.

None of these suggestions constitutes a panacea for low turnout or uninformed voters, but together they would give all Kansans far more of a stake in the electoral process.

Thus, the state of Kansas should seek – aggressively and at some considerable expense – to register every eligible voter. That means going into high schools, monitoring GED programs, canvassing neighborhoods, and sending out email solicitations. Registration should be simple – the motor-voter form is a good example – and universally available.

Second, Kansas policymakers should seriously consider going to a 100 percent vote-by-mail system. Oregon has long had such a process, and turnout has risen, especially in local elections, while fraud has remained a non-issue. In the end, we should embrace higher turnout.

Oregon’s Secretary of State concedes that mail balloting is not a cure-all, “but in terms of a reform that’s simple, familiar, and powerful, automatically sending every American voter his [or her] ballot — without their needing to ask for it – is a great place to start.”

Beyond increasing voting participation, one additional reform might make our politics far more representative. Current partisan primaries in Kansas and many other states lead to the nomination of relatively extreme candidates, in that highly partisan and ideological activists often dominate low-turnout primary elections.

In three states – California, Washington, and Louisiana – primary voters choose among all candidates for an office, with the top two advancing to the general election. The major argument for such a system is that it will produce more moderate winning candidates, who will better represent the overall preferences of the broad electorate.

In practice, Kansas voters in some legislative districts might well choose two Republicans as the top two primary candidates. In the general election, the argument goes, the GOP candidates would have to compete for some Democratic and independent votes, thus producing somewhat more moderate results.

Initial studies of the top-two primary have been inconclusive, but over the long term this reform has the chance to make election results more representative of all voters’ preferences.

In the end, we should energetically encourage more individuals to cast their ballots, with universal registration and voting by mail. And if this broader electorate could produce more representative results through a top-two primary system, all the better.

In short, the combination of more voters and stronger representation offers a positive, highly democratic approach to enhancing the quality of electoral politics in Kansas.

Burdett Loomis is a political science professor at the University of Kansas.

Hays-based company’s drone demo leaves local farmers impressed

By COOPER SLOUGH
Hays Post

A small crowd gathered just west of Antonino on Saturday as Apis Remote Sensing Systems, a drone distributor based in Hays, took the opportunity to show the public what their products can do.

Co-owners Beau Dealy and Curt Moore say drones are an invaluable resource for today’s farmers.

At the moment, Apis carries two types of drones. The first is a carbon fiber wing called the AgEagle, which is launched via catapult and cruises at 400 feet at 40 mph. The AgEagle follows a preset flight path before landing softly at a predetermined location.

The second drone Apis carries is called the DJI Phantom, which is a quadcopter drone that carries a camera beneath the air frame.

The drones use sensors that capture NIR (Near Infrared) images, which are then stitched together by a computer to show a color-coded map measuring topography and temperature. That information then can be used to gauge crop health.

For more information, contact Beau Dealy at [email protected] or call (785) 261-9591.

To view photos from Saturday’s flights click here: Normal View Infrared View Topographical View

For video of the drones in action, check out the video above.

Pope lectures Congress in historic speech

Screen Shot 2015-09-24 at 9.10.04 AMWASHINGTON (AP) — Pope Francis on Thursday warned Congress that fight against religious extremism must not trample on freedom.

He urged Congress members — and the United States as a whole — not to be afraid of immigrants but to welcome them as fellow human beings.

In his historic speech to lawmakers, the pontiff said people are not things that can be discarded just because they are troublesome. Francis also issued a call for an end to the death penalty in the U.S. and across the world. Francis says that every life is sacred and society can only benefit from rehabilitating those convicted of crimes.

The pontiff did not specifically mention abortion. But he urged lawmakers and all Americans to “protect and defend human life at every stage of its development.”

In addition, Francis used his speech to Congress to express sympathy for American Indians for their “turbulent and violent” early contacts with arriving Europeans. But he says it is hard to judge past actions by today’s standards.

Watch the Pope’s speech to congress here

9:20 a.m.

Pope Francis met briefly with House Speaker John Boehner in an opening act of his historic visit to Congress.

Awaiting the pope’s arrival, Boehner repeatedly straightened his tie and shifted from foot to foot, and joked and chatted with reporters about the history of the House furnishings.

When the pontiff arrived, their visit lasted only a few minutes. Tens of thousands wait outside, with lawmakers and guests seated in the House chamber for the first speech by a pope to Congress.

___

8:50 a.m.

The pope greeted well-wishers outside the Vatican’s diplomatic mission on his way to his historic visit to Congress.

As he did Wednesday, Francis lingered with the excited crowd outside the mission, on another sunny day. Tens of thousands await him on Capitol Hill.

The pope shook hands and touched the faces of schoolchildren, dressed up in ties or Sunday dresses. As the pope moved past, one young boy shouted, “Oh yeah! I got a selfie.”

After his speech to Congress, Francis is expected to go to the Hall of Statues, where there is a statue of America’s newest saint, Junipero Serra, whom Francis canonized on Wednesday.

Joined by House Speaker John Boehner, he’ll then offer to the Library of Congress a special edition of the Bible. Then he’s to go to a balcony to greet and offer a benediction to the throngs below.

___

8:30 a.m.

The Federal Aviation Administration is reminding people that Washington, New York and Philadelphia are no-drone zones during the pope’s visit to the U.S.

The FAA has put in flight restrictions through Sunday. That means flying a drone or unmanned aircraft anywhere in those cities is against the law and may result in criminal or civil charges.

Pope Francis leaves Washington on Thursday for New York and goes to Philadelphia on Saturday.

___

8:20 a.m.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi is bringing Tom Steyer, who’s a California-based environmentalist and top Democratic donor, and Marc Benioff, a business software CEO, to the House gallery for the pope’s speech.

Among other guests, she’s also invited Mary Kay Henry, international president of the Service Employees International Union, and Matilda Cuomo, mother of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and widow of former Gov. Mario Cuomo.

___

8:15 a.m.

Security is tight at the Capitol as crowds gather for Pope Francis’ arrival.

Streets are closed within a three-block radius of the Capitol and police advise visitors to avoid driving to the scene. The city’s subway was packed with riders hours before his speech to Congress but few delays were reported.

Police are visible throughout the Capitol complex and visitors are encountering a series of security checkpoints.

___

8:10 a.m.

“Mr. Speaker, the pope of the Holy See!”

Those booming words will announce Pope Francis as he arrives for his historic speech as the first pontiff to address a joint session of Congress.

The man who will perform the ceremonial call is more accustomed to protecting famous people than introducing them.

Paul Irving spent his career in the Secret Service. He was a special agent for 25 years and the service’s assistant director from 2001 to 2008.

Speaker John Boehner chose him as House sergeant-at-arms in 2012.

When he’s not introducing dignitaries before Congress, his main duty is to oversee security in the House side of the Capitol.

___

8:05 a.m.

Tens of thousands already are gathering on the front lawn of the Capitol to watch the pope’s speech on Jumbotron screens and maybe catch a glimpse of Francis. He is expected to wave from a balcony a few hundred yards away.

Libby Miller of Frederick, Maryland, says her friends all told her she was crazy for schlepping to Capitol Hill with her 4-year-old son, Camden, and 2-year-old daughter, Avery.

She left the house before 5 a.m. and settled into a spot on the lawn by 7:30 a.m., about two hours before the pope’s scheduled arrival. And she was prepared to keep her kids occupied — iPad loaded with games, toy trucks, snacks and a sippy cup.

Miller says she wants her kids to be there for an important moment in history. They won’t understand it now, but she says “they’ll get it eventually.”

___

7:45 a.m.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is marking Pope Francis’ visit to the Capitol in the modern way: on YouTube.

The Kentucky Republican says in a video Thursday morning that Francis’ elevation to pope “heralded a new beginning for Catholics in Kentucky, across America and from every corner of the world.”

McConnell praises the pope’s “unique and engaging style” and says Americans have watched the pope reach new and different audiences, “both from within his flock and far beyond it.”

___

7:30 a.m.

Joint gatherings of Congress for dignitaries’ speeches are usually a recipe for competing partisan ovations and chummy backslaps and handshakes.

This time, House and Senate leaders have asked lawmakers: Please, not when the pope is here.

The leaders sent an appeal to lawmakers in advance of Pope Francis’ speech Thursday morning, asking them to act with decorum in his presence. Among the no-no’s — reaching out for handshakes or conversation with the pope and those accompanying him as they walk down the center aisle of the grand House chamber.

To drum the lesson in, the leaders’ letter reminded legislators that the historic event will be seen on television “around the whole world and by many of our constituents.”

Leaders have made similar appeals for State of the Union addresses, with little luck.

___

7 a.m.

With his speech Thursday morning, Francis will become the first pope to address Congress. But the list of foreign leaders and dignitaries who’ve done so is long.

The House historian’s office says it’s happened 117 previous times.

Francis won’t be the first religious leader to address the House and Senate. Technically that was Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II in 1991, since the British monarch heads the Anglican Church.

The most addresses to Congress? Three, by both British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The historian’s office lists the first such speech in 1874. That’s when Congress heard King Kalakaua of Hawaii, still an independent kingdom then.

The first speech by a foreign leader to lawmakers was in 1824 by the Marquis de Lafayette, the French general who helped the colonies win independence. But he addressed only the House.

___

6:45 a.m.

Francis’ speech to Congress is a personal and political coup for House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican and Catholic.

Boehner unsuccessfully invited the two previous popes, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, to speak. He began trying in 1994 during his second House term, organizing a petition by lawmakers saying John Paul II was a “world leader, ambassador of peace and an important catalyst in the fall of the Iron Curtain.”

Francis is the fourth pope to meet with a president in the U.S., including presidential visits on six separate trips by John Paul II.

The first was Paul VI’s 1965 New York meeting with President Lyndon Johnson. Benedict XVI met President George W. Bush in 2008.

Francis’ coming speech at the United Nations will be the fifth by a pope.

5 ordered to stand trial in Salina teen’s shooting death

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — A judge has found sufficient evidence for five young men to stand trial in the mistaken-identity shooting death of a Salina girl.

The Salina Journal reports that Andrew Woodring, Macio Palacio Jr., Stephen Gentry, Daniel Sims and Jerome Forbes were bound over for trial Wednesday.

Palacio admitted in a police interview to firing the bullet that killed 17-year-old Allie Saum in May. But Saline County Attorney Ellen Mitchell argued that all five men were equally responsible, even though two of the men claim they weren’t present.

Mitchell says all the men were in on a plan to commit aggravated battery. Saum was a passenger in a truck that police say some of the defendants mistakenly believed belonged to a person who had been in an earlier altercation with them.

Lions Club provides free vision screening for Hays youngsters

HF lions screening

On Wednesday, the Kansas Lions provided free vision screening for 160 children in hindergarten and first grade at Holy Family School in Hays.

The Lions were using the new Welch/Allyn SPOT Screener. Helping with the screening were Jim Huenergarde and Dee Bodine from Hays Lions, and Don Sweeney and Elwyn Maneth from the Great Bend Evening Lions Club.

Women’s Leadership Project launches sixth annual Red Flag Campaign

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Submitted

October is Domestic Violence Awareness month. To bring attention to this issue, the Women’s Leadership Project is again bringing The Red Flag Campaign to Fort Hays State University.

This is a public awareness campaign designed to address domestic and dating violence and promote its prevention on college campuses. The campaign was created using a “bystander intervention” strategy, encouraging friends and other campus community members to “say something” when they see warning signs (“red flags”) for dating violence in a friend’s relationship.

Research indicates that abuse occurs in 21 percent of college dating relationships. Fifty-eight percent of college students say they don’t know how to help someone who is a victim of dating abuse, and 38 percent of college students say they would not know where to get help. (2011 College Dating Violence and Abuse)

Throughout the month of October, red flags will be visible on the grounds of the university to remind everyone to address “red flags” they may see with friends, family, or personally. Additionally, WLP will host several events to bring awareness to this important cause.

The Women’s Leadership Project will kick off the campaign by speaking to all freshmen classes on Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and 4. The Women’s Leadership Project will be partnering with the Campus Men’s Action Network for the film screening of The Mask You Live In on Oct. 5 at 7pm. This film addresses the impact our “narrow definition” of masculinity has on boys, men, and society.

A Times Talk will be held Oct. 7. On Oct. 28 at 4:30 pm, Panhellenic, SGA and WLP will host a Silent No More Awareness walk. In addition to these events, watch for The Red Flag Campaign at multiple men’s and women’s athletic events.

For more information regarding the Red Flag Campaign, or what you can do if you see relationship red flags, contact the Women’s Leadership Project at [email protected] or (785) 628-4312.

Goodland man dies after head-on semi crash, fire

OBERLIN – A man from Goodland died in an accident just before 2a.m. on Thursday in Decatur County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Chevy Silverado driven by Roger Dwain Enfield, 60,  was southbound on U.S. 83 thirteen miles south of Oberlin.

The pickup moved left of center and collided head on with a semi. Both vehicles came to rest is the southbound ditch and the pickup caught fire.

Enfield was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Paul’s Funeral Home.

The semi driver Aleksandr L. Boklach, 32, Clovis, CA., was transported to Decatur County Hospital.

Boklach was properly restrained at the time of the accident. Enfield’s seatbelt usage is unknown because the vehicle burned, according to the KHP.

Waymaster appointed to joint interim agriculture committee

109th Dist. State Rep. Troy Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill
109th Dist. State Rep. Troy Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill
TOPEKA — Rep. Troy L. Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill, has been appointed by Speaker Ray Merrick, R-Stillwell, to serve on the Joint Interim Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee.

Waymaster is one of three house members selected to serve on the Joint Interim Agriculture and Natural Resources committee, which will meet periodically for the rest of the year until the 2016 legislative session begins on Jan. 11.

Waymaster will serve on the committee with the following House members: Representatives Jack Thimesch and Sharon Schwartz. The main topic of discussion for the Joint Interim Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee will be water issues.

During the regular Legislative Session, Waymaster serves as a member on the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee.

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