Month: September 2016
Police investigate Kansas domestic disturbance, murder
DOUGLAS COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Douglas County are investigating a murder.
Just after 9p.m. on Friday officers with the Lawrence Police Department were dispatched to the 400 block of Ohio Street in Lawrence for a domestic disturbance, which involved weapons, according to a media release.
Upon arrival, officers located a woman who had significant injuries and a man who had died.
The woman was treated for her injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and has since been released.
No further information was released early Saturday.
Hort Night features low-water turf, flowers, veggies
By JOE BECKER
KSU Ag Research Ctr Groundskeeper
Tuesday evening, September 20 is set for the annual Horticulture Night at the K-State Ag Research Center in Hays. Emphasis will focus on the low-water use turf demo plots, the tomato and pepper varietal trials, and the Prairie Star flower performance trials. The date has been intentionally scheduled later in the summer so attendees can better view the results of the complete season.
Jared Hoyle, K-State turfgrass specialist will lead the discussion for the low-water use (mostly buffalo) turfgrass varieties. The plots are well established in their second year since planting for visual comparisons. Hoyle has experience with multiple turfgrass issues throughout the state. The particular demo plot is in conjunction with the Turf Conversion Program promoted by the city of Hays. This program encourages homeowners in Hays to convert their full-sun exposure lawns currently planted to a cool-season turf to a low-water use turfgrass. The advantages of established warm-season grass is water conservation and less maintenance.
The Ellis County Master Gardeners will present the results of production for the 11 tomato, 24 pepper, and 3 zucchini varieties. There will be sampling tables so participants can taste the varietal variations. The Master Gardeners will also announce their exciting plans for the 2017 garden projects.
The evening will conclude with a walk along the Prairie Star Flower Performance Trials. More than 130 cultivars are being grown and rated for vigor, appearance and season-long performance. Holly Dickman, Ellis County Horticulture Agent, will provide her comments on each general group or series. This statewide bedding plant trial program (4 locations) is one of only a few across the U.S. and the only one in the Great Plains region. Cultivars selected for the Prairie Star list must perform well for two years before being added to the recommended plant list. The weather this summer has certainly thrown a challenge for some of them. Come see for yourself how they have performed –you’ll be the first to know the best bedding plants cultivars for the Hays area coming on the market.
Property and homeowners are encouraged to attend. Bring along your friends and neighbors, and youngsters who are interested in growing vegetables and flowers. Questions about flowers, vegetable gardening and turfgrass will be addressed but it is not limited to these topics. Registration begins at 5:30 p.m. with the program starting at 6 p.m. The Research Center is located south of Hays at 1232 240th Avenue. For more information call (785) 625-3425 or check Facebook or Twitter.
Listen to the Holthus Hotline with ‘Voice of the Chiefs’ Mitch Holthus
Listen as ‘Voice of the Chiefs’ Mitch Holthus recaps last week’s comeback win over AFC West rival San Diego and previews Sunday’s game at Houston.
The Holthus Hotline airs Saturday at 6:30 a.m. during the Chiefs season.
Chinese Student Association to host festival tonight in FHSU’s Memorial Union
FHSU University Relations and Marketing
The Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival — a free, activity-filled night — will be at 7 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 17, in the Fort Hays Ballroom of Fort Hays State University’s Memorial Union.
The mid-autumn festival, similar to Thanksgiving, will feature moon cake, dumplings and authentic Chinese food.
FHSU’s Chinese Student Association is the sponsor.
FHSU Family Day temporarily expands campus population
FHSU University Relations and Marketing
By Friday morning, 430 people had signed up for Family Day – Saturday, Sept. 17 – at Fort Hays State University.
The day is dedicated to welcoming the families of current students and engaging them in a day of activities, culminating in a Fort Hays State University football game Saturday night.
The schedule for this year’s Family Day:
Fall Family Day
Saturday, September 17, 2016
8 AM
Check-in Opens – Sunset Lounge Atrium, Memorial Union
- Families will pick up nametags, shirts, Family Day schedule, and tickets for the brunch and tailgate.
- T-shirts are limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.
- Directions to the Fishing Derby will be available.
8:30 – 11 AM
Fishing Derby hosted by Intramurals
- Gear and bait available for families to fish for catfish. Fish will be cleaned and filleted for participants.
- No fishing license required for participants under the age of 16.
- Fishing licenses for adults can be obtained in advance online at the Kansas Parks, Wildlife and Tourism website, at a Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks Office, and in advance or on the day of the Fishing Derby at Wal-Mart and Vanderbilt’s in Hays. One-day licenses can be purchased for $8.50.
10:30 AM – Noon
Opening Brunch – FHSU Ballroom, Memorial Union
Students and families can enjoy a hearty brunch in a casual come-&-go atmosphere.
1 – 3 PM
MakerSpace Open House – Forsyth Library, lower level
Families will be able to learn soldering with simple soldering kits, build rockets, learn about 3D printing, and how to the NOA robot. They will also get to see all of the fun toys available in MakerSpace.
1 – 3 PM
The Astounding Race – the Quad
Sponsored by the Global Leadership Project; fashioned after the TV show The Amazing Race, you and your family will follow clues and learn about other countries and global issues.
3:30 – 4:30 PM
Faculty Meet & Greet Ice Cream Social – Memorial Union Patio
Students and families can enjoy make-your-own ice cream sundaes while meeting administrators, faculty and staff of FHSU.
4:15 – 5:15 PM
Free Time
5:30 – 6:45 PM
Tiger Tailgate, Lewis Field Tailgating Lot (Look for the large white tent on the east side of the stadium)
Students and families can join all chapters of the Greek Community for some BBQ food and drink before the Tigers take on Central Oklahoma.
6 PM
Student Paint Up – Lewis Field Stadium
Students and families can have their faces painted to support their fellow Tigers! This activity is sponsored by the University Activities Board (UAB).
7 PM
FHSU Tigers Football vs.Central Oklahoma – Lewis Field Stadium
Tickets may be purchased at any of the ticket booths at the stadium.
Sunny, warm Saturday, chance of evening storms
Plenty of sunshine expected today with light winds through the day, starting out mainly westerly but gradually turning south. A chance of thunderstorms will be possible late this afternoon into tonight. Dry conditions are in the forecast for Sunday through Tuesday, with thunderstorm chances starting to work their way back in for the middle and later portions of the week.
Today: Sunny, with a high near 82. Calm wind becoming south southeast 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.
Tonight: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 58. Southeast wind 6 to 8 mph.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 87. South southwest wind 7 to 13 mph.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 61. South wind 7 to 9 mph.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 91. West southwest wind around 8 mph becoming northeast in the afternoon.
VA develops new suicide prevention program available in Kansas

BY MEGAN HART
Michael Fellman says a chance passerby — or, perhaps, divine intervention — kept him alive when the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder became overwhelming.
Fellman, a combat veteran of the Iraq War who spoke September 9, at a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs summit in Topeka about mental health care, said he had planned to die on July 31, 2015.
About a month earlier he had gone to the Colmery-O’Neil VA Medical Center in Topeka and was prescribed medication for his condition. But he didn’t realize the medication would take time to work and stopped taking it when he didn’t see improvement after a week.
Fellman’s symptoms soon escalated to the point that even a trip to the grocery store became overwhelming.
“I was tired of the nightmares, tired of the anxiety, tired of the hypervigilance, tired of the depression,” he said.
Fellman said he drove to Lake Shawnee, in east Topeka, and wrote some notes while sitting in his car. No one had gone by for some time, he said, so he stepped out of the car and raised his gun to his head.
It was then that someone happened to walk by and ask if he was OK.
He said he was. The person walked on. But that split second was enough to disrupt his plan.
“That fraction of a second, when I put my pistol down, gave me a chance to think,” he said.
The interruption led Fellman to seek treatment. But the VA hopes to flag other veterans in need of mental health care before they experience a similar crisis and reduce the odds they will get so close to death.
Changes in care
The VA is developing a program called Reach Vet, which will identify veterans who may be at an increased risk of suicide based on any mental health diagnoses and other information that might suggest a mental health need, such as seeking treatment for insomnia, said Stephanie Davis, suicide prevention coordinator for VA Health of Eastern Kansas.
People who receive psychiatric care early tend to have better health outcomes, she said.
“We can provide advance care to people maybe even before they know they’re struggling,” she said.
In 2014, veterans died by suicide at a rate that was 21 percent higher than the general population, Davis said. In Kansas, those who died were more likely to be white males who were younger than 30 or older than 65, she said.
Brian Stephens, group practice manager for VA Health of Eastern Kansas, said the VA medical centers in Topeka and Leavenworth have implemented same-day access for people thought to be at risk for suicide, though people requesting mental health care without an urgent need may have to wait until the next day to be seen.
The two medical centers also are working to integrate their primary care and mental health care providers, Stephens said. If veterans don’t have to come back for follow-up appointments to meet with a mental health provider, he said, they are more likely to start treatment, less likely to harm themselves and generally more satisfied with their care.
The psychiatrists and psychologists know about the change, but the medical centers still are working out how to manage the new workflow, Stephens said. Ideally, they will reach some veterans who may not realize their symptoms come from a mental health problem or who wouldn’t seek care for it because it hasn’t reached a crisis level, he said.
“If we don’t capitalize on that right there in the beginning, we miss that opportunity,” he said. “Most times, asking for help is the hardest thing to do.”
Recognizing warning signs
If VA employees detect someone is at an increased risk of suicide, they can set up mental health appointments and develop a safety plan for that veteran, Davis said.
While some people think about suicide for a long time, the decision to act on those thoughts typically is impulsive, meaning even the brief delay to remove a trigger lock could give the person time to reconsider, she said.
“If we can just interrupt somebody for five minutes, we can save a life,” she said.
Some people have gotten creative, such as one veteran who froze the key to his gun safe into an ice cube so he would have to thaw it before he could harm himself, Davis said.
The safety plans also ask the veterans to recognize warning signs that their mental health may be deteriorating, such as isolating themselves or abusing alcohol or drugs, Davis said, and to come up with coping strategies and safe distractions.
For example, one veteran found that he felt better after doing some people-watching, so he would go and buy a movie ticket — not to watch the movie, but to sit outside a comedy and see the smiling people come out, she said.
While there is no cure for post-traumatic stress disorder or most mental health conditions, people can learn to cope and substantially improve their quality of life with treatment, Davis said.
In Fellman’s case, it took about five months of inpatient treatment through the VA to process his experiences and learn to cope with them. While he said the treatment at times was frustrating, he now feels better equipped to deal with symptoms as they come up. He also is using his experiences to encourage other soldiers who are struggling to seek help.
“I have this giant toolbox and all of these tools have been given to me,” he said.
Megan Hart is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach her on Twitter @meganhartMC
Smith Center routs TMP
By Jeremy McGuire
Hays Post
SMITH CENTER, KS-Smith Center scored touchdowns on their first six possessions and cruised to a 62-0 shutout of the TMP Monarchs on Friday night at Hubbard Stadium in Smith Center. The Redmen defense was impressive as well, holding TMP to 115 yards of total offense and never allowed the Monarchs inside the 30 yard line. Smith Center racked up 414 yards of offense as well.
Kaden Meitler ran for 75 yards and three scores while Trace Haven came off of the bench to rush for 81 yards on five carries and two touchdowns. One bright spot for TMP was freshman quarterback Carson Jacobs coming off of the bench late in the fourth quarter to complete three pass for 37 yards. Smith Center is now 1-2 on the year and will travel to Norton on Friday. TMP drops to 0-3 and will host Plainville for their homecoming matchup this Friday.
JASON CAULEY POST-GAME
GAME HIGHLIGHTS
High school football scoreboard week 3
Ark Valley Chisholm Trail I
Hutchinson 33 Salina Central 14
Salina South 21 Haysville Campus 36
Ark Valley Chisholm Trail IV
McPherson 46 Winfield 0
Central Kansas League
Pratt 55 Nickerson 26
Hoisington 41 Hillsboro 0
Larned 13 Hesston 41
Great West Activities Conference
Colby 24 Hugoton 21
Ulysses 0 Holcomb 52
*Cimarron 7 Scott City 52
Hi Plains
Southwest Heights 8 Meade 58
Mid-Continent League (11-Man)
Plainville 16 Phillipsburg 31
Norton 55 Oakley 16
TMP 0 Smith Center 62
North Central Activities Association
Sacred Heart 7 Beloit 52
SE of Saline 42 Russell 20
North Central Kansas League
*Andover Central 7 Abilene 25
Marysville 26 Wamego 10
Twin Valley League
*La Crosse 14 Washington Co. 36
Western Athletic Conference
Liberal 21 Hays 13
*Great Bend 58 Wichita NW 47
*Wichita Heights 34 Dodge City 14
8-Man
Central Prairie League
Central Plains 40 Otis-Bison 28
Victoria 56 Ellinwood 18
Ness City 46 St. John 28
Northern Plains
Osborne 50 Chase 0
*Logan-Palco 50 Thunder Ridge 0
*Stockton 8 Pike Valley 56
Northwest Kansas League
*Trego Community 46 Quinter 0
Rawlins Co. 64 Decatur Co. 12
*Non-league
Friday’s Scores
By The Associated Press
PREP FOOTBALL
Abilene 25, Andover Central 7
Andale 61, Mulvane 52
Ashland 50, Kiowa County 26
Atchison 40, KC Schlagle 12
Attica/Argonia 46, Flinthills 0
Augusta 33, Circle 8
Basehor-Linwood 57, KC Turner 6
Beloit 52, Salina Sacred Heart 7
Bishop Miege 48, St. Thomas Aquinas 21
Blue Springs, Mo. 35, SM West 21
Blue Valley Stillwell 25, BV North 7
Burlingame 46, Lebo 0
Burlington 13, Prairie View 9
BV Northwest 15, BV West 0
Caldwell 54, Central Burden 6
Caney Valley 40, Bluestem 0
Central Plains 40, Otis-Bison 28
Cheney 38, Medicine Lodge 10
Cherryvale 50, Eureka 8
Chetopa 56, Altoona-Midway 6
Clay Center 28, Goodland 6
Clearwater 43, El Dorado 7
Clifton-Clyde 48, Valley Falls 0
Coffeyville 44, Riverton 12
Columbus 22, Girard 6
Concordia 30, Chapman 14
Conway Springs 47, Douglass 6
Council Grove 9, Chase County 6
Derby 52, Maize 7
Destiny Christian, Okla. 75, Wichita Life Prep 28
Dighton/Healy 49, Wichita County 0
Ell-Saline 38, Moundridge 12
Ellis 50, Sublette 2
Ellsworth 44, Republic County 28
Eudora 54, KC Sumner 0
Fort Scott 22, Chanute 0
Frontenac 28, Pittsburg Colgan 7
Galena 30, Baxter Springs 0
Garden City 21, Wichita South 6
Garden Plain 29, Kearney Catholic, Neb. 20
Gardner-Edgerton 24, St. James Academy 14
Goddard 50, Andover 14
Goddard-Eisenhower 40, Newton 27
Great Bend 58, Wichita Northwest 47
Greeley County 56, Rolla 8
Greenfield, Mo. 54, Marmaton Valley 0
Halstead 44, Kingman 0
Hanover 50, Southern Coffey 0
Hartford 52, Madison/Hamilton 30
Hesston 41, Larned 13
Hiawatha 34, Doniphan West 26
Hoisington 41, Hillsboro 0
Holcomb 52, Ulysses 0
Hugoton 21, Colby 2
Hutchinson 33, Salina Central 14
Hutchinson Central Christian 70, Stafford 14
Hutchinson Trinity 30, Remington 6
Independence 27, Parsons 7
Jackson Heights 46, Oskaloosa 7
Jayhawk Linn 46, Oswego 0
Jefferson North 22, Pleasant Ridge 6
Junction City 56, Topeka West 0
KC Piper 33, Bonner Springs 20
Labette County 54, Osawatomie 12
Lakin 28, Elkhart 13
Lee’s Summit, Mo. 42, Olathe South 24
Lee’s Summit West, Mo. 28, Lawrence 7
Liberal 21, Hays 13
Liberty, Mo. 21, Olathe East 14
Linn 50, Wetmore 6
Logan/Palco 50, Thunder Ridge 0
Louisburg 31, DeSoto 17
Lyndon 48, Central Heights 0
Macksville 40, Kinsley 22
Maize South 59, KC Washington 6
Manhattan 50, Highland Park 6
Marais des Cygnes Valley 58, Pleasanton 6
Marion 44, Sedgwick 21
Marysville 26, Wamego 10
McPherson 46, Winfield 0
Meade 58, Southwestern Hts. 8
Mill Valley 40, Blue Valley Southwest 14
Minneapolis 22, Lyons 13
Mission Valley 44, West Franklin 15
Nemaha Central 43, Holton 42
Neodesha 23, Humboldt 0
Ness City 46, St. John 28
North Kansas City, Mo. 27, Leavenworth 18
Northern Valley 44, Triplains-Brewster 14
Norton 55, Oakley 16
Norwich 56, Fairfield 8
Osage City 35, Olpe 33
Osborne 50, Lakeside 0
Ottawa 42, Baldwin 21
Park Hill, Mo. 34, Lawrence Free State 21
Perry-Lecompton 56, Atchison County 0
Phillipsburg 31, Plainville 16
Pike Valley 56, Stockton 8
Pratt 55, Nickerson 26
Pretty Prairie 72, Pratt Skyline 34
Rawlins County 64, Oberlin-Decatur 14
Rock Hills 54, Chase 8
Rockhurst, Mo. 26, SM East 20
Rose Hill 7, Wellington 6
Rossville 50, Riley County 25
Royal Valley 33, Riverside 21
Rural Vista 48, Onaga 0
Sabetha 46, Jefferson West 0
Santa Fe Trail 46, Anderson County 14
Sarcoxie, Mo. 52, Southeast 0
Satanta 52, Fowler 0
Scott City 52, Cimarron 7
Sedan 62, Oxford 28
Silver Lake 41, St. Mary’s 0
SM North 28, Lansing 7
Smith Center 62, Hays-TMP-Marian 0
Smoky Valley 28, Haven 12
Solomon 54, Goessel 36
South Barber 60, Burrton 0
South Central 52, Ingalls 6
Southeast Saline 42, Russell 20
Spearville 54, Minneola 8
Spring Hill 18, Paola 12
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 50, Bennington 22
St. Paul 58, Frankfort 8
Sterling 14, Inman 12
Sylvan-Lucas 46, Lincoln 34
Syracuse 44, Johnson-Stanton County 0
Tescott 36, BV Randolph 14
Tonganoxie 56, KC Bishop Ward 0
Topeka 49, Emporia 0
Topeka Seaman 14, Topeka Hayden 0
Trego 46, Quinter 0
Troy 33, Centralia 16
Tyrone, Okla. 52, Moscow 6
Uniontown 25, Northeast-Arma 0
Valley Center 29, Arkansas City 7
Victoria 56, Ellinwood 18
Wabaunsee 25, Rock Creek 13
Wakefield 48, Little River 36
Washburn Rural 31, Shawnee Heights 7
Washington County 36, LaCrosse 14
Waverly 44, Crest 6
Webb City, Mo. 28, Pittsburg 7
Wellsville 29, Iola 0
West Elk 54, Cedar Vale/Dexter 8
Wichita Campus 36, Salina South 21
Wichita Collegiate 45, Buhler 21
Wichita Heights 34, Dodge City 14
Wichita Southeast 38, Wichita North 2
Wilson 46, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 0
POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS
Fredonia vs. Erie, ppd. to Sep 17.
White Sox rally to hand Royals fifth straight loss
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chris Sale pitched his American League-leading sixth complete-game to pick up his 16th win, Carlos Sanchez hit a three-run homer in the eighth inning, and the Chicago White Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 7-4 Friday night.
Sanchez had struck out in his first three at-bats before hitting a pitch frm Kelvin Herrera out to right with J.D. Shuck and Avisail Garcia aboard. It was Sanchez’s first home run since last Sept. 21 at Detroit.
Todd Frazier doubled with one out and scored on Alex Avila’s single for the first run of the inning.
Sale (16-8), 1-6 in his previous 11 starts, limited the Royals to four runs, three earned, while striking out 10 and walking one.
Kansas City has lost five straight and will need a miracle to return to postseason after winning the past two American League championships.
Herrera (2-5) blew his third save in 14 chances.
New seismologist hired to study increase in earthquakes

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — The Oklahoma Geological Survey has announced the hiring of a new state seismologist to help study the increase in earthquakes linked to oil and gas wastewater disposal.
Survey Director Jeremy Boak announced Friday that Jacob Walter will assume the post in November. Walter is a research associate at the Institute for Geophysics at the University of Texas. His research interests include tectonic tremor and slow slip; earthquakes; and seismic triggering of earthquakes.
Oklahoma has seen a dramatic increase in seismic activity in recent years, including a 5.8-magnitude quake on Sept. 3 that was the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in the state. It shook several states, including nearby Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas. Scientists have linked the quakes to the underground disposal of wastewater from oil and natural gas production.
No. 16 Tiger women’s soccer settles for draw with UNK; remains unbeaten

HAYS, Kan. – The 16th-ranked Fort Hays State women’s soccer team remained undefeated on Friday by playing to a 1-1 draw with Nebraska-Kearney. The Tigers are now 4-0-1 overall, still the best start in program history. Nebraska-Kearney is now 2-2-1.
Thayla Dwyer gave the Tigers the lead in the first half when she picked up her fourth goal of the season in the eighth minute. Dani Harris crossed the ball from the far side of the field. Dwyer took possession of the pass and beat the keeper to the lower left of the goal.
UNK struck late in the first half to even the score. At the 44:42 mark, Marika Van Brocklin took control of a loose ball then sent a long shot from about forty yards out. Tiger keeper Abbie Flax was playing up on the play and sprawled backwards to deflect the shot but wasn’t able to get enough of the ball as it fell into the net.
From that point, neither team could find the winning goal in the final 65 minutes of play. Both teams finished with just nine shot attempts for the match.
Flax recorded four saves on the night and is now 3-0-1 on the season. Allie Prososki of Nebraska-Kearney moved to 2-1-1.
The Tigers are back in action once more on Sunday when they welcome Emporia State to Hays for an afternoon non-conference game. The match is set for 2 pm.
FHSU Sports Information