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Winifreda Frances ‘Winnie’ (VonFeldt) Beckwith

Winifreda Beckwith - Paper PictureRoseburg Oregon – Winifreda Frances “Winnie” (VonFeldt) Beckwith, age 93, former Victoria, Kansas resident died August 30, 2015, at her daughter’s home in Oregon.

She was born August 20, 1922, in Vincent, Kansas to Frank G. and Angela (Weigel) VonFeldt.

Winnie moved to Oregon in 1941, and worked as a welder at the naval ship yard. She met and married Alfred D. Beckwith on August 29, 1944. She spent the next 30 years in Oregon, raising her six children before returning to Victoria in 1971, to care for her parents.

She was a member of the Basilica of St. Fidelis, Christian Mothers, Daughter of Isabella and V.F.W. Auxiliary all of Victoria. She served on the Elms Housing Board and the Commodity Board both of Victoria.  Winnie was a founding member of the Victoria Meal Site and served as their Manager for 25 years.

She loved to play pinochle and was in several card groups. When she wasn’t attending one of her meetings, or playing cards she loved to read, cook and work in her yard. Winnie had many good friends and loving relatives in Victoria. She missed everybody tremendously when she had to move to Oregon with her daughter, Sandra.

Survivors include four daughters, Judith Angela Barger, Sandra Beckwith, Marlene Mizell and husband, Fred, Kathy Hammond and husband, Steve; two sons, David Beckwith, Mark Beckwith; two brothers, Leo VonFeldt and wife, Dorothy, Palco, KS; Karlos VonFeldt and Wife, Susie, Topeka, KS; one sister, Charlotte Sanders, Wichita, KS; ten grandchildren; 25 great grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband; siblings, Arthur VonFeldt; Isabelle Standley, Alma Sherlock, Mabel Hayes and Mary Louise Dreiling; two daughters-in-law, David’s wife, Rosa Beckwith and Mark’s wife, Lauretta Beckwith.

The family is planning a memorial mass in the near future to be held at The Basilica of St. Fidelis Victoria, Kansas, with inurnment at St. Fidelis Cemetery.

Memorial contributions may be made in Winnie’s name to The VHS Alumni Association, PO Box 382, Victoria, KS 67671. Cline’s Mortuary, 412 Main Street, Victoria, Kansas is in charge of local arrangements.

Condolences can be sent via email to [email protected].

JanSport co-founder, Hays native Yowell dies at age 69

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Skip M. Yowell

Skip M. Yowell, 69, died Wednesday, October 14th, 2015 at his home in Saint Peter, Kansas.

He was born in Hays, Kansas, to Harold and Marjorie (Murray) Yowell. He spent his early years in Grainfield, moving to Great Bend at the age of 5.  He started kindergarten at Park Elementary School and graduated from Great Bend High School in 1964.

Skip was an avid hiker and climber, sharing his passion for the outdoors with everyone who crossed his path. In 1967 he co-founded the backpack company JanSport. He strongly believed in the importance of promoting outdoor recreation and environmental responsibility to future generations and worked with many groups including: Boy Scouts of America, Big City Mountaineers and The Outdoor Industry Association. His book, The Hippie Guide to Climbing the Corporate Ladder & Other Mountains, shares details about his life and adventures.

He is preceded in death by his parents, Harold and Marjorie Yowell and a brother Randy Yowell.  Survivors include his wife Winnie Kingsbury of Saint Peter, daughter Quinn Yowell of Tampa, Florida, step-daughter Wesley Kingsbury of Hays, step-son Hunt Kingsbury of Northbrook, Illinois, grandchildren Drew, Madeline, Sabrina, Hunter and Parker, his brother Lindsey Yowell and his wife Lynn Yowell of Chelan, Washington, his sister Diana Crouch and her husband Larry Crouch of Saint Peter and many nieces, nephews and friends.

Skip will be remembered by many names; Husband, Father, Friend, Legend, Founder, Mentor, Adventurer, Athlete, Teller of Tales, Gardener, and Philanthropist.

Please join Skip’s family and friends in celebrating Skip’s life Thursday, October 22nd, 2015 at Prairie Junction in Morland, Kansas at 2:00 p.m.

On November 12th 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. the Great Bend Chamber of Commerce and the Economic Development Committee invite Skip’s family and friends to join in a celebration in honor of Skip at the Kansas Wetlands Education Center, Cheyenne Bottoms, Great Bend, Kansas.

Memorial donations can be made to Big City Mountaineers, Boy Scouts of America or Kansas Wetlands Education Center, Cheyenne Bottoms.

His great beauty was his humanity. You can take a man out of Kansas, but you can’t take the simple beauty of Kansas out of the man. That humanity, that kindness of spirit, was his gift to each of us.

Police: Suspect in custody, accused in attack on Kan. woman

photo Wichita Police
photo Wichita Police

WICHITA- Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a case of aggravated battery and have made an arrest in an apparent random attack on a woman.

Police in Wichita reported in a media release, that on October 6, a woman was walking in the 600 block of East Douglas just after 3p.m. when a man on a bicycle yelled an obscenity at her.

He then approached her and hit her on the left side of her head with an unknown object. She sustained serious head injuries and underwent surgery at a local hospital.

The suspect, a black male, was wearing a black bicycle helmet, sunglasses, black gloves, a long sleeve blue shirt and long blue pants

He was also wearing a backpack with a distinct reflective design on the back. A video from a local business captured the suspect immediately following the incident.

The video was posted online and after a tip to CrimeStoppers the suspect is in custody, according to police.

Name of the victim and the suspect have not been released.

HPD Activity Log Oct. 15

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hpd actvity log sponsor hess bittel fletcher

The Hays Police Department responded to 14 animal calls and 14 traffic stops Thursday, Oct. 15, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Lost Animals ONLY–100 block W 18th St, Hays; 8:10 AM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–2700 block Vine St, Hays; 8:30 AM
Animal At Large–1300 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 8:41 AM
Assist – Other (not MV)–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 9:44 AM
Found/Lost Property–1400 block US 183 Alt Hwy, Hays; 9:49 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–2300 block Timber Dr, Hays; 10:17 AM
Animal Call–400 block Elm St, Hays; 10:41 AM
Criminal Trespass–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 5:43 PM
Mental Health Call–2400 block Main St. Terr, Hays; 10:59 AM
Obstruction of Legal Process–2600 block Vine St, Hays; 11:39 AM
Mental Health Call–3400 block Vine St, Hays; 12:07 PM
MV Accident-Private Prop-Hit & Run–400 block W 11th St, Hays; 10/12 11 PM; 10/13 2:30 AM
Suspicious Activity–100 block W 6th St, Hays; 1 PM
Burglary/residence–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 3:46 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–1100 block Downing Ave, Hays; 5:16 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–200 block E 32nd St, Hays; 7:36 PM

HHS girls fourth, boys fifth at WAC cross country meet

The Hays High girls finished fourth and the boys fifth at the Western Athletic Conference cross country meet Thursday in Liberal. Dodge City won the girls race with 33 points while the Indians scored 80. Haley George led the Indian girls with a 12th place finish.

Click on links below for complete results.
Boys WAC cross country results
Girls WAC cross country results

In the boys race, Dodge City won with 27 points. The Indians scored 110. Ethan Shippy was the top Hays High runner with a 12th place finish.

“The overall results may not truly show it, but coaching staff was very proud of the way our athletes competed” said head coach Jerold Harris. “Our ladies took a step forward and competed tougher than we have in the past few weeks. Our varsity guys did what they always do, competed tough”.

Boys Team Results
1. Dodge City – 27
2. Garden City – 62
3. Liberal – 74
4. Great Bend – 86
5. Hays High – 110

Girls Team Results
1. Dodge City – 33
2. Garden City – 65
3. Liberal – 70
4. Hays High – 80
5. Great Bend – 102

Minimum wage ruling prompts KDADS request for additional funding

By Dave Ranney

A spokesperson for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services says the agency will need an additional $6.5 million to comply with a recent ruling that requires employers to pay in-home workers minimum wage and overtime.

Photo by KHI News Service Kari Bruffett, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, warned lawmakers last year that the pay change for home health workers could reduce or eliminate sleep-cycle support for 1,400 Kansans.
Photo by KHI News Service Kari Bruffett, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, warned lawmakers last year that the pay change for home health workers could reduce or eliminate sleep-cycle support for 1,400 Kansans.

The department has asked Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget office to build the additional funding into its budget for the current fiscal year, according to Angela de Rocha, KDADS director of communications. However, tax revenues are more than $60 million below projections so far this fiscal year, creating a bleak budget situation in Kansas.

Last week Chief Justice John Roberts of the U.S. Supreme Court denied an application to stay that U.S. Department of Labor ruling, which is expected to have the biggest effect on the state’s Medicaid-funded services — called sleep cycle supports — that involve paying workers to be present while frail elders or people with serious disabilities sleep.

These workers help beneficiaries with toileting, taking medication, being repositioned to prevent bedsores or getting out of bed in the morning. The services are designed to help people continue living in community-based settings and avoid having to move to nursing homes, which are more expensive.

For years, sleep-support workers in Kansas have been paid about $35 per evening, which per hour is less than minimum wage. After the ruling takes effect Nov. 12, most of these workers will need to be paid between $45 and $60 per evening. De Rocha said KDADS and the managed care organizations (MCOs) that administer KanCare, the state’s Medicaid program, will “continue to work with consumers to ensure adequate support is maintained.”

Some services, she said, may have to be realigned in ways that have not yet been defined. Last year, KDADS Secretary Kari Bruffett called lawmakers’ attention to the Department of Labor ruling’s potential to reduce or eliminate sleep-cycle support for 1,400 people and force “more consumers … into institutions.”

The ruling also requires employers to pay attendant care workers for some of the time they spend driving between their care recipients’ homes.

“But the biggest concern centers around sleep cycle support,” said Mike Oxford, executive director of the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, a nonprofit program that helps arrange in-home services for people with physical disabilities. “What the ruling says, essentially, is that the services really can’t be paid for on a daily-rate basis like they are now,” Oxford said.

“It has to be by the hour, and it has to be minimum wage.” Oxford said he welcomed news of the KDADS request to Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration for the additional $6.5 million. “There hasn’t been a lot information that’s been shared with the public on this, so it’s great to hear,” he said. “Our hope now is that KDADS, the MCOs and the service providers can all work together on this.”

Though the ruling takes effect in mid-November, federal officials won’t begin enforcing the new requirements until 2016.

“What that means is that between Nov. 12 and Dec. 31, the Department of Labor will have ‘prosecutorial discretion’ as long as employers are making a good faith effort to come into compliance,” said Deane Beebe, a spokesperson for the Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute, a national organization that represents home health aides and personal care attendants and has been outspoken in its support for the ruling.

“But on Jan. 1, that discretion gets replaced with enforcement,” she said. “Workers who feel like they’ve not been paid minimum wage can file complaints with the Department of Labor in their state.

They will have legal standing.” Beebe said her organization is encouraging states to resist cutting services in an effort to offset the ruling’s costs. “The solution to this is not to cut services,” she said. “If they do, they’ll be out of compliance with the Olmstead ruling and with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and that will be a real problem.”

The Olmstead ruling refers to a 1999 U.S. Supreme Court decision that said people with disabilities have a right to services that allow them to live in community-based settings rather than institution-based settings.

Dave Ranney is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Winners: Chicken Soup for the Soul book “Volunteering and Giving Back” with 99 KZ Country

khaz css volunteering 20150922We are giving away the Chicken Soup for the Soul book Volunteering and Giving Back.

Listen to Theresa Trapp October 12 – 16, 2015 for chances to call 785-628-2995 to win. Random callers will win a copy of the book instantly. No age requirement.

Winners will need to pick up their books at the KZ Country Studio, 2300 Hall, Hays, KS within 30 days of winning.

Remember, one win per person per contest in 30 days.

One person can make a significant difference in the lives of others. This collection of 101 inspiring stories celebrates volunteers and those who give back, and also shows how the biggest beneficiaries are the givers themselves.

Volunteers and people who give back are models of unconditional kindness, compassion, and love. You choose hope over despair, optimism over cynicism, and caring over indifference. And by serving others, you also help yourself. In this inspiring collection of 101 personal stories by and for volunteers and those who give back, you and your fellow unsung heroes will get some of the recognition and appreciation you deserve.

 

Winner 10/12/15:  Martha Miller.
Winner 10/13/15:  Linda Palmberg.
Winner 10/14/15:  Terry Hagaman.
Winner 10/15/15:  Judy Arnold.
Winner 10/16/15:  Betty Mead.

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

 

Proceeds of Sunday jewelry show will benefit Cancer Council of Ellis Co.

Mu Eta Chapter of Sigma Phi Gamma will host a Premier Jewelry Showing from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at Thirsty’s Brew Pub and Grill, 2704 Vine, Ste. B.
Proceeds will be donated to the Cancer Council of Ellis County.

“Come out and support a great cause and don’t forget to ask us about our sorority whose purpose is friendship and service,” the group said in a news release.

Annual Festival of Faith will be aired on Eagle TV

If you missed the annual Festival of Faith last weekend, Eagle Communications has you covered.

The event, presented by the Ellis County Ministerial Alliance and Hays Area Chamber of Commerce, was Oct. 11 at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center on the Fort Hays State University campus.

This year’s theme was One Lord, One Body, One Community.

The event will be rebroadcast several times on Eagle Cable Channels 14 and 614.

Remaining rebroadcasts are scheduled for:

• Friday, Oct. 16 @ 11am & 4pm
• Saturday Oct. 17 @ 2pm and 7pm
• Sunday, Oct. 18 @ 2pm and 7pm

Landmark Hays restaurant contributes ‘naming rights’ to upcoming gala


A major expansion is slated to take place at Al’s Chickenette, 700 Vine. The project will include paving the entire lot and a building project that will result in an additional 100 seats and a bar. Fans of the Hays landmark will have the opportunity to bid on “naming rights to the bar” at an upcoming gala for Parkinson’s disease awareness.

The Emerald Ball will be held in the Schmidt-Bickle Training Center on the campus of Fort Hays State University at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 21. Net proceeds will benefit the Emerald Foundation, the Hays Area Children’s Center and the Davis Phinney Foundation. The gala will include a social, silent and live auctions, dinner, and a dance.

In support of the cause, Caroline Von Lintel and Gary Reiman, owners of Al’s Chickenette, have donated “naming rights to the bar,” hosting privileges at the first VIP party, a personalized booth with a name plaque, and a year’s worth of chicken dinners (two two-piece dinners every month for 12 months) to the highest bidder at the gala. The donation has a total value of $15,000.

“The cause is one that’s very near and dear to my heart,” said Von Lintel. “My maternal grandmother died of Parkinson’s and my aunt on my fathers side. I also have a 45-year-old cousin who also suffers from the disease.”

In 2014, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback declared Al’s Chickenette the oldest business in the community, celebrating 68 years in business. With the expansion, comes hopes of many more years serving up delicious fried chicken, loved by locals and tourists alike.

Emerald Foundation Chairman J. Basil Dannebohm along with Dr. Mirta M. Martin, president of Fort Hays State University, will serve as the honorary event hosts. Wichita television personality Sierra Scott will emcee the gala. Scott will be joined on stage by Jenn Bates, co-anchor of KWCH “Eyewitness News This Morning.”

Frankie Valens, who shot to fame in the 1960s and enjoyed hits with “This Magic Moment” and “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” will perform during the event alongside Ron Neuman and the Diamonds Vocal Band. The Diamonds launched to fame in 1956 with their first hit “Why do Fools Fall in Love,” followed by 15 more Top Hits that sold more than 16 million copies including “Little Darlin,” “The Stroll” and “Silhouettes.”

“The Emerald Foundation’s mission is a good one,” said Von Lintel. “This gala is just the beginning of what will be a shiny future for the organization. When I think of all the lives the foundation will touch, when I see such hard work on behalf of Parkinson’s disease awareness, it gives me hope.”

Other items up for auction at the gala include everything from cruises, to fine art, from grills, to sports memorabilia, including a one-of-a-kind shadow box featuring a 1983 Team 7-Eleven Murray road racing bike valued at upwards of $25,000.

Tickets to the Emerald Ball must be purchased in advance by visiting the event website at http://www.myemerald.org.

Kan. man to stand trial in woman’s stabbing death

stabbingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Sedgwick County judge has ruled that a Wichita man will stand trial in the death of a 27-year-old woman.

Marvin Lee Gray Jr. is charged in the death of Ciera Ray, whose body was found in her home June 25. Ray’s 3-year-old daughter was found unharmed inside the home. The Wichita Eagle reports  an autopsy report documented 37 stab wounds on Ray’s body.

After hearing nearly three hours of testimony during Gray’s preliminary hearing Thursday, Sedgwick County District Court Judge Jeffrey Goering ruled there was enough evidence to try Gray on charges of first-degree premeditated murder, aggravated burglary, rape and aggravated criminal sodomy.

Gray pleaded not guilty to the charges after Goering’s ruling.

Gray’s scheduled for a jury trial Nov. 9.

Great deals remain as Eagle Radio Auction nears the finish line

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Todd Haskell and Dustin Armbruster of Eagle Radio of Hays

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Great deals await at the Eagle Radio Auction, which is being aired until 5 p.m. Friday live on KAYS-1400 AM and KKQY-101.9.

Listeners can place a bid by calling (785) 625-2578 or (800) 569-0144 during the auction.

Visit http://www.eagleradioauction.com for more information or to view items that will be auctioned during the event.

Not near a radio? Click HERE to listen live online.

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