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Kansas Supreme Court suspends attorney’s law license

State Supreme CourtTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court has indefinitely suspended a Topeka attorney’s law license.

The state’s high court handed down on Friday a more severe penalty against Wendell Betts than the two-year suspension recommended by a disciplinary panel. The effective date was made retroactive to the September 2013 date an administrative hearing.

The Supreme Court said that given Betts disciplinary record and his current problems, a more severe discipline than recommended by the panel should be imposed.

A disciplinary panel found Betts had been previously disciplined on five occasions, and had engaged in a pattern of criminal misconduct and abuse of alcohol and use of illegal drugs.

Betts could eventually petition for reinstatement, but would be required to establish he has complied with certain conditions, such as abstinence from alcohol and drugs.

Assistant professor files federal lawsuit against Emporia State

Melvin Hale-photo Emporia State
Melvin Hale-photo Emporia State

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — An assistant professor who has accused Emporia State University of racial discrimination has filed a federal lawsuit, accusing the school of defamation and invasion of privacy.

Melvin Hale filed the lawsuit Wednesday. He and his wife, Angelica, who are black, have been embroiled in confrontation with the university since April, when someone left a note with a racial slur in the office of Angelica Hale’s graduate assistant. They allege the dean of School of Library and Information Management did not investigate the incident and retaliated against them for complaining.

In September, the university said an investigation found no evidence of a hate crime or racial discrimination.

Melvin Hale alleges those findings damaged his reputation and portrayed him as a liar.

The university said it doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

Gerald Leon Gager

Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 3.14.24 PMGerald Leon Gager was born Dec. 3, 1920, to Carl Leon and Grace (Nowland) Gager on the family farm south of Woodston. To welcome him were a brother Frank and sister Aleene. As children, they walked to the small country school 2 or 5 miles from the family farm, uphill all the way there and back. Gerald frequently beat the school teacher there to light the old wood/coal stove in the one room schoolhouse. After school, he joined Carl and his great-grandfather, F.C Gager in farming, running a few dozen head of cattle and hand milking a handful of milk cows.

Gerald greatly enjoyed hunting, fishing, going to dances and playing cards with family and friends. As a farmboy, he always had a great respect and love for horses, owning one or more throughout most of his life. He once said, ”You can do a lot of thinking while sitting on a pond bank or a horse’s back.”

During WWII he followed the example of his uncles and brother by ”joining up” but while Frank enlisted in the Army, Gerald chose the Navy. This branch of the service took him all over the Pacific where he got to visit dozens of tropical islands and countries, very foreign to this Kansas farm boy. His ship, the USS Cecil, was anchored off-shore as Gerald and his shipmates witnessed the historic flag-raising on Iwo Jima from her decks. The Cecil also sailed into the port of Pearl Harbor shortly after the horrible surprise attack by the Japanese. We asked him once if he had any lasting friendships he’d cherished during that time. After a long pause he said, “You didn’t really make any close friends like that because they might be killed and gone the next day”. But that pause was full of some personal memories flitting by.

Gerald’s letters home during this time did not reflect his life in the Navy during the war. Instead they were full of concern for his family, the crops, his animals, his friends, etc… Following the war, he returned to Woodston and resumed life on the farm enjoying hobbies and going to dances. He eventually met his ‘Pill’, Estel Hutton, and married her in Stockton, moving his new wife and her son, Dale, into the Gager farmhouse with his parents. In the next few years, Rickey, Jackie, and Beckie were added to the family and the larger family was moved to the 2 story farmhouse just a stone’s throw, or hollering distance, north of the old farmstead.

Besides farming, Gerald pumped wells, did mechanic work for his brother-in-law, and once retired, they moved to Woodston where they joined the volunteer fire department, Woodston Booster Club, the United Methodist Church and the morning coffee club down at the elevator. They also enjoyed visiting neighbors for evenings of playing cards, gardening and enjoyed having close neighbors to torment. He was always getting accused of picking one neighbor’s asparagus to add to his own bounty. Yet when he visited her garage to ‘borrow’ ice from her ice maker, she loaded his hands down with sweet goodies she’d been making.

Gerald lost his wife of almost 50 years to a short battle with cancer and just over a year later married his new dance partner, Vula Roy. They eventually moved to her family farm south of the Webster Lake. They had met at a dance after some well-meaning Woodston ladies coerced him to get with the living again and accompany them to dances. He and Vula continued to frequent dances, gardened, and travelled to see her in Texas, Colo, Calif and Arizona.

Late into his 80’s Gerald contracted the dreaded Alzheimer’s disease, and it was decided a move into Plainville would benefit him. As the disease progressed, they then moved to an apartment in Stockton and eventually he needed more personal care and became a beloved resident of Solomon Valley Manor in Stockton. Though he lost a lot of his short-term memory, he fought to retain his mild manner, slight stubbornness, sense of humor and wonderful qualities that made up who he was.

Small talk had gotten difficult for him with family and other visitors, as he couldn’t add much to any conversation, but he still welcomed all visitors, played cards and dominoes and every once in a while would surprise everyone with a Gerald original. He once told his brother-in-law that ”his forgetter was working overtime” that day. Another time, before leaving the Osborne Pizza Hut, he was asked if he needed to use the men’s room, he curtly replied, ”No, I’ll wait till we get to the car.” Then he just grinned from ear to ear. Shortly after that, he and Dale were rehashing deer hunting days and his dad asked Dale if he had a spot picked out yet for deer season. Dale said he hadn’t yet as it was still summer and then asked Dad if he had any good ideas, to which he quickly answered, ”Sure do… close to the pickup.” You’d have to be a deer hunter, who had experienced dragging a heavy field-dressed deer up and down the hills in a pasture, clear back to the pickup parked along the road, to fully appreciate that quick statement!!

Dad taught the staff at Solomon Valley a few new things too. They’d jokingly ask his name to which he’d smile and say TALISIFER SLOVERSLIZTKE !! At first they just laughed but then he’d have them all wrapping their tongues around that made up moniker till they had mastered it. One morning he’d gotten out of bed before dawn and the nurses saw him sitting in the dining area looking out the window. When asked what he was doing out there, he just smiled and said he was waiting for someone to come have coffee with him. As a safety precaution, Dad sat on an alarm pad to alert the nurses if he got up from his chair. When he got bored, he’d wait till they were all busy and lift his leg just far enough to set the alarm off. Of course when the nurses would look up, he’d just be sitting there smiling at them. They’d go back to work and pretty soon his alarm would go off. And there he’d be sitting just SO INNOCENT. Yeah, they all knew how innocent he was!!! At our last visit with Dad, just 2 weeks before he left us, he had been so talkative, animated and told us about how he had found another nurse he could tease (torment). One day she made a face at him and he made a meaner face right back at her and ‘gave her a finger’ and the game was on. Then he grew serious as he looked around him at the other residents and told us how lucky he was when to compared with some of the other OLD PEOPLE in there. The ones that couldn’t feed themselves, couldn’t talk… He felt good, had a pretty good appetite, and was going to make it to a hundred. And he made a point to tell us again how good the staff at Solomon Valley was. How they treated him so good, were friendly, joked and visited with him, loved his teasing, BUT MAYBE THAT WAS HIS STORY and he was sticking to it !!

Gerald was preceded in death by his parents, brother Frank, sister Aleene, his wife Pill, a stillborn son and is survived by his children, 9 grands, 13 great-grands and 4 great-great-grands, dozens of step-family members and a multitude of other family and friends.

A Memorial Service will be held Monday, October 19, 2015, at 1:30 P.M. at the United Methodist Church in Woodston, Kansas with Pastor Les Ellis officiating. Inurnment will follow at the Woodston Cemetery.

Memorials may be made to Woodston United Methodist Church and sent in care of Plumer-Overlease Funeral Home, 723 N 1st, Stockton, KS 67669. Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.plumeroverlease.com.

HPD response to Hays Middle School was ‘precautionary measure’

According to an email message sent by administrators, the Hays Police Department was called to Hays Middle School on Friday afternoon after a report of a trespass.

“At approximately 1:50 today I called the Hays Police Department, because we had a trespass violation on the Hays Middle School grounds,” said Craig Pallister, HMS principal.

“The person never had contact with students and/or staff and was escorted off of school grounds while being detained by the Hays Police Department,” he said.

The email was sent to parents alerting them to the incident shortly before 3 p.m.

“There was no immediate threat to students and staff,” the notice said. “This was taken as a precautionary measure.”

Colorado prosecutor plans no charges against NW Kansas voter

Yuma County District Attorney Brittny Lewton-photo 13th Judicial DIstrict
Yuma County District Attorney Brittny Lewton-photo 13th Judicial DIstrict

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Colorado prosecutor says her office does not plan to file any charges against a man who allegedly voted in Kansas after doing so Colorado.

Yuma County District Attorney Brittny Lewton said Friday that Lincoln L. Wilson did not commit perjury or voter fraud because he voted first in Colorado.

She says it did not become fraud until he went to Kansas several days later and cast a second ballot, and any perjury and double voting occurred in Kansas.

Lewton says her office conducted an investigation, and sent Kansas its findings.

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach has filed 10 criminal charges, including three felony counts, in Sherman County against the 64-year-old voter.

Wilson allegedly voted in both Kansas and Colorado in the same elections in 2010, 2012 and 2014.

GM catches new ignition switch problem in pickups, SUVs

RecallDETROIT (AP) — General Motors has another ignition switch problem that can make engines stall, but this one was discovered quickly and no one has been hurt.

The automaker is recalling about 3,300 pickup trucks and SUVs, mainly in North America. Ignitions can get stuck in the “start” position and slip into “accessory” if jostled. That causes engines to stall and disables power steering and possibly air bags.

The problem is similar to one revealed last year in 2.6 million older GM small cars that cost the company billions and killed at least 169 people. GM has admitted that it knew of the trouble but didn’t recall the cars for a decade.

The new recall covers 2014 Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra light-duty pickups, 2015 heavy-duty pickups, and 2015 Suburban and Tahoe SUVs.

KSU to honor Kan. native, former presidential press secretary

marlin fitzwaterMANHATTAN -A Kansas State University alumnus and one of the longest-serving presidential press secretaries in history is receiving an honorary doctorate from Kansas State University, according to a media release from the school.

Marlin Fitzwater, who served as assistant to the president and press secretary for Ronald Reagan from 1987 to 1989 and for George H. W. Bush from 1989 to 1993, will be honored at K-State’s Graduate School commencement at 1 p.m. Friday, Dec. 11, in Bramlage Coliseum. He will also serve as the commencement speaker for the ceremony.

The awarding of the honorary doctorate follows the approval by the Kansas Board of Regents. it is one of the highest honors the university can give. Fitzwater will be awarded the honorary doctorate and also will receive a medal at the commencement ceremony.

“Marlin Fitzwater is a political figure that I and millions of other Americans remember well throughout some of our nation’s biggest historical moments,” said Kirk Schulz, Kansas State University president. “We want to honor his distinguished career in both Kansas media and national media as well as his ties to Kansas State University, wherein he returned as a speaker for the Landon Lecture series in 1996. It is through the leadership of such distinguished alumni that will help Kansas State University be recognized as a Top 50 public research university by 2025.

Fitzwater grew up on a small farm near Abilene. In 1965, he earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from Kansas State University. In 1965, Fitzwater was named the Outstanding Male Journalism graduate.

Fitzwater is the only press secretary in history to be appointed by two U.S. presidents.

In 1992, Fitzwater received the Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second highest civilian achievement award.

City warns church after neighbor complains about choir noise

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The city of Oakland, California, sent a letter warning a church that it could be fined after a neighbor complained that choir practice was causing unbearable night-time noise.

The San Francisco Chronicle reports that the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church has served residents in West Oakland for 65 years. Pastor Thomas A. Harris III says he was surprised to learn he could face an initial fine of $3,529, followed by $500-per-day penalties, for the “joyful noise” of choir practice.

Harris says rehearsal ends at 9 p.m., but the complaint sent to the city says the loud music sometimes lasts until 2 a.m.

City spokeswoman Karen Boyd says the letter was a courtesy notice and that she hasn’t received any more complaints. She says she doesn’t intend to fine the church.

September unemployment rate dips across northwest Kansas

Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 10.57.50 AM

TOPEKA – The unemployment rate in Ellis County fell from 3.1 percent in August to 2.7 percent in September, according to the Kansas Department of Labor.

The state’s September seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 4.4 percent, down from 4.6 percent in August and increased from 4.3 percent in September 2014.

Seasonally adjusted figures show Kansas gained 10,100 private sector jobs since last year, or 0.9 percent. Kansas nonfarm jobs increased by 8,700, or 0.6 percent, since September 2014. Since last month, Kansas gained 4,200 seasonally adjusted private sector jobs, or 0.4 percent. The state gained 4,900 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs since August 2015.

“Kansas economic conditions moved in the right direction, with the unemployment rate dropping to 4.4 percent this month. Unemployment claims remained low, and the private sector added more than 10,000 jobs over the year,” Kansas Secretary of Labor, Lana Gordon said.

Most of northwest Kansas posted extremely low jobless rates, with Sheridan County among the state’s lowest at 2.1 percent. Hamilton County in southwest Kansas posted a minuscule 1.5 percent unemployment rate, while Greeley County recorded 1.5 percent.

Every other northwest Kansas counties also recorded a decrease in unemployment in September. Click the map above for details.

Not seasonally adjusted figures show Kansas gained 10,200 private sector jobs since last year, or 0.9 percent. Kansas nonfarm jobs increased by 8,200, a 0.6 percent increase since September 2014. Since August, private sector jobs decreased by 3,000, or 0.3 percent. However, the state gained 19,800 total nonfarm jobs over the month, or 1.4 percent.

“The construction industry continues to be a major contributor to growth in the state, both in jobs and hourly wages. Due to strong growth in specialty trade contractors, construction jobs have increased by 9.5 percent over the year and average hourly wages have increased by 6 percent,” Emilie Doerksen, Labor Economist, Kansas Department of Labor said.

The October Labor Report will be released on Friday, Nov. 20.

Moran re-files campaign finance report

Screen Shot 2015-10-16 at 12.29.09 PMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Sen. Jerry Moran’s campaign has re-filed a campaign finance report after a Kansas woman found more than 200 pages missing from a federal website.

The Wichita Eagle reports Moran’s campaign found out Thursday that more than 200 pages of its July quarterly fundraising report was missing from the Federal Election Commission’s website.

The campaign re-filed the FEC report Thursday and released the missing pages to the newspaper.

Debbie Nuss, former Manhattan chapter president of the Kansas League of Women Voters, complained to the FEC, saying Moran, a Republican, didn’t disclose an itemized report of campaign expenditures.

Moran’s campaign says it’s still unclear why the pages were missing from the FEC website.

Among other things, the pages show Moran has received $3,000 from defense contractor Lockheed Martin’s political action committee.

Hobson’s third NAIA championship team going into Hastings College Athletic Hall of Fame

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State head coach Tony Hobson will be honored by Hastings College once again on Saturday. Hobson’s 2005-06 NAIA National Championship team will be inducted into the Hastings Athletic Hall of Fame, making it the fifth time Hobson will be earn a Hall of Fame honor at Hastings College.

Hobson is already a member of the Hastings Athletic Hall of Fame as a player and a coach. His 2001-02 and 2002-03 national championship teams have been inducted as well, and he received the Outstanding Alumni Coach Award. All four of the these honors were bestowed upon Hobson in 2011. His 2005-06 team will mark the fifth time he enters the Hall of Fame for his accomplishments at Hastings College.

Hobson is one of the most successful collegiate women’s basketball coaches in the nation, entering his 24th year overall with a career record of 545-177 (.755). He ranks in the top 10 in win percentage among active coaches in NCAA Division II with a four-year college win percentage of .756 (343-111). In seven years at Fort Hays State, Hobson has a record of 132-71, including a 30-4 mark last year – the program’s best season ever in its NCAA Division II history.

Woman, 62, killed in Kansas accident

pedestrian accidentGARDEN PLAIN, Kan. (AP) — A 62-year-old woman has died after she was struck by a vehicle in Sedgwick County.

The Wichita Eagle reports the woman was walking along a rural Sedgwick County road early Friday when she was hit. The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office says the accident happened at a gravel intersection between Garden Plain and Cheney.

The victim’s name was not released. The sheriff’s office says the driver stayed on the scene and has been cooperative.

Investigators are looking into where the victim was walking on the road at the time of the accident.

Police: Missing Salina man contacts authorities

Huston
Huston

SALINA- Law enforcement authorities in Saline County say a missing Salina man has contacted the Sheriff’s Office.

Captain Roger Soldan said Jerry Huston, 51, called the Sheriff’s Office Friday morning to say he was in McPherson and was okay.

Huston did not offer any explanation as to why he did not contact his employer or family after he was reported missing, according to Soldan.

Huston a truck driver, contacted his employer early Monday afternoon to say he was in McPherson and had to take care of personal business. When he had not been heard from later, McPherson Police were contacted.

They found his semi on Tuesday afternoon in the parking lot of the McPherson Hospital.

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