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FHSU women’s soccer No. 3 seed in NCAA Central Regional; face Harding in Mankato, Minn.

INDIANAPOLIS – Fort Hays State Women’s Soccer will compete in the NCAA Tournament for the second time in program history when it heads to Mankato, Minnesota to take on Harding University. The Tigers are the No. 3 seed, while Harding, the Great American Conference Tournament champion, serves as the No. 6 seed. The winner gets the right to play No. 2 seed Minnesota State-Mankato in the second round.

On the other side of the bracket, No. 1 seed Central Missouri is a host site. The No. 4 seed Central Oklahoma meets No. 5 seed Minot State in the opening round for the rite to play Central Missouri in the second round.

This is the first appearance for the FHSU women in the national tournament since 2012. That year they earned an automatic bid by winning the MIAA Tournament. This year the Tigers earn an at-large bid with their solid body of work overall at 14-4-2. The Tigers fell in the opening round in 2012 to conference foe Central Oklahoma, but get to meet an out-of-conference team this year in Harding, which won the GAC Tournament on penalty kicks against Southwestern Oklahoma State. Harding is 11-6-2 overall.

The first two rounds will take place on Friday and Sunday. Times of matches will be determined on Tuesday. The Regional Final and Super Regional Final will take place the following weekend.

Sewer cleaning continues Tuesday in southeast Hays

sewer-cleaning-nov-8
Sewer cleaning scheduled for November 8.

CITY OF HAYS

The City of Hays Utilities Department has contracted ProPipe to conduct sewer line cleaning and inspections at the locations described on the maps. Cleaning began Thursday, October 13, 2016 and will continue through Tuesday, November 22, 2016. The date may change due to breakdowns, weather or other problems.

sewer-clean-nov-8-cu
Sewer cleaning scheduled for November 8.

On Tuesday, November 8, 2016, crews will be working in the area from 17th St. and Eisenhower Rd. south to 13th St. and east to Lawrence Dr.

Also to be cleaned are 13th St. and Vine St. south to 10th St.,  and the area of 6th St. and 7th St. between Fort St. and Oak St.

Should you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact us at the Utilities Office at (785) 628-7380 or via email [email protected].

 

Kan. prison guard admits receiving $200K in bribes

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A former guard at the federal prison in Leavenworth, Kansas, has admitted in federal court that he accepted bribes to smuggle tobacco to inmates.

Forty-seven-year-old Marc Buckner of Kansas City, Kansas, pleaded guilty Monday to one count of being a public official accepting bribes.

Authorities have said Buckner received more than $200,000 in bribes while he worked at the prison from 2005 to 2014. The U.S. attorney’s office alleges Buckner got about $750 each time he smuggled tobacco into the prison.

Prosecutors say Buckner hid the contraband tobacco and rolling papers in two handmade insoles in his shoes and carried out the smuggling once or twice a month.

A sentencing date was not immediately set. He faces up to 15 years in prison.

Listen to Tiger Talk with Fort Hays State football coach Chris Brown

Tiger Talk Logo (Freddy's-Mokas)

Click below to listen to Tiger Talk with “Voice of the Tigers” Gerard Wellbrock and Fort Hays State head football coach Chris Brown as they review Saturday loss to No. 1 Northwest Missouri State and take a look ahead at this Saturday’s regular season finale at Nebraska-Kearney.

Tiger Talk airs on Monday evening at 6 p.m. on Tiger Radio Mix-103.

Boy rescued from Kansas attic reunites with officers

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A boy who was confined to a DeSoto attic by his mother has been reunited with the Johnson County authorities who rescued him.

The Kansas City Star reports that the then 6-year-old boy was discovered in August 2010 severely malnourished and covered with feces and urine after a relative expressed concern about the child, who has Down syndrome.

The boy’s mother had hidden him in the attic. His mother, Rachel Perez, was sentenced to eight years in prison for attempted second-degree murder, child abuse and aggravated child endangerment.

 

 

 

The child, who’s now 13, helped the four officers who rescued him host an anti-bullying program Saturday. The teen was presented with a plaque designating him an honorary deputy sheriff.

Sheriff: Kan. man jailed for allegedly stealing truck, vases from cemetery

King-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
King-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

BARTON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating a suspect in connection with drugs and theft.

Just before midnight on Saturday, officers from the Great Bend Police Department were dispatched to the 5900 block of Eisenhower Street and advised that a 2000 Dodge Dakota had been stolen, along with a trailer and a four-wheeler, according to a media release.

Officers were later able to locate the truck abandoned in the 800 block of Frey Street, although they discovered that the trailer and four-wheeler had been removed, along with stereo equipment out of the truck.

Through further investigation, officers came to believe that the missing items were located at 403 Almond Street, and were stolen by Jacob King, age 29.

Officers obtained a search warrant for the residence, which enabled them to recover the other missing items.

While Officers were searching for King and attempting to recover the stolen property, Corporal Shane Becker was dispatched to the cemetery in reference to a person who appeared to be stealing vases off of graves.

He located Jacob King there, kneeling by a grave, and was able to take him into custody without further incident. While searching King before taking him to jail, officers also located illegal drugs on King.

King was booked into the Barton County Jail on felony charges of theft and possession of drugs.

King has previous convictions for stalking, theft and drugs in Barton and Stafford County.

HAWVER: When election season ends, the work begins

martin hawver line artWithin minutes of the last election being called on Tuesday night, or probably early Wednesday, the real action starts in the Statehouse, as the Senate—but more interestingly, the House—starts to organize to become your Legislature.

It’s not going to be easy, it’s not going to be quick and it’s not going to be politically pretty.

For most Kansans, Election Day means it’s time to start thinking about where the good china is and when to start thawing the turkey for Thanksgiving.

But for Statehouse habitues, it means watching every move, every gesture, who’s talking to whom, and trying to figure out where the real power is going to be in the upcoming two years of Kansas government and how it is going to effect what happens to them and to their clients, whether they be welfare recipients, highway contractors, schoolteachers or payday loan companies.

So, for insiders, things just start when the voting ends.

Key is going to be election of House and Senate leadership in early December Republican caucuses (the GOP is likely to maintain majorities in both chambers). Chances are good that Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita, is re-elected to a second four-year term as leader of the upper chamber. Might be some squawking, but that race is about wrapped up. It gets more complicated when the leadership of the Senate—and it will need a new vice president and majority leader—gathers to select the chairs of committees and appoint members to those committees. The chairman of a committee pretty much runs things and can often decide how a bill gets amended-up for presentation to the full Senate.

There may, or may not be, significant under-the-covers deal-making to decide who will chair the committees.

In the House? Well, with the retirement of Speaker Ray Merrick, R-Stilwell, there may be a two-way or three-way race for Speaker—and the Speaker gets the power to make single-handed appointments to committees.

A race for House Speaker among what is near-certain to be a Republican-dominated House means that the character of the new House GOP caucus is key. If it’s conservatives, look for them to vote for a conservative leader, and if more moderate Republicans hold the majority in the caucus, look for them to make their move.

But that scrap within the GOP caucus—and yes, there are committee memberships and chairmanships in the negotiating—is just the start of the organization.

The House Speaker is elected by the full House. That means that Democrats get to vote, too, for House Speaker but not until the first day of the session. In recent memory, the minority party has generally just confirmed the majority party’s leadership—but it doesn’t have to. It’s been a matter of political courtesy, which is starting to wear thin.

So, if Democrats decide to vote in return for political concessions, they could well back a Speaker candidate who didn’t win the majority in the GOP caucus.

What happens then? We don’t know for sure. Does a moderate GOP Speaker name some Democrats to committee chairs or stack committee membership so that Democrats have more voice?

Or does a conservative Speaker make friends with the moderates in the caucus and try to maintain enough unity so that Republicans can defeat on the House floor tax increases, school funding increases, and taxes on LLCs and other now tax-exempt Kansans?

It may be Jan. 9, first day of the session, when a House Speaker is formally elected that we learn who is leading the House and whether lawmakers spend the first week or so on the payroll waiting to find out who’s running committees. H’mmm…

So, while the politicking is over for most Kansans, it’s just starting for those folks you elected to represent you. This ride isn’t over yet…by a long-shot.

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

FHSU to host Entrepreneur Direct speaker series tomorrow

fhsu-entrepreneursFHSU University Relations and Marketing

Science entrepreneurs will be featured in Fort Hays State University’s fall 2016 Entrepreneur Direct Lecture Series. Isaac Rodriguez and Kayla Rodriguez Graff of SweetBio and Lisa Stehno-Bittel, president of Likarda, LLC, will speak on Tuesday, Nov. 8, from 10 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. in the Memorial Union’s Fort Hays Ballroom.

SweetBio is a bioscience company bringing to market a membrane to be used in dental treatment.

Likarda is the parent company of two bioscience companies. One is Likarda Animal Health, which produces kits to manage diabetes in diabetic dogs and cats. The other is LikardaBio, which supports pharmaceutical, nutraceutical and therapeutic development companies.

Entrepreneur Direct is a speaker series that features successful entrepreneurs in an informal setting that is accessible and free to students, faculty and the public.

Prosecutors seek access to indicted Kansas developer’s guns

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Federal prosecutors say they want access to inventory firearms housed in storage units owned by a Topeka real estate developer who is charged with more than 100 counts of bankruptcy fraud.

The Topeka Capital Journal reports that Kent Lindemuth is accused of purchasing 103 firearms between August 2013 and December 2014, after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November 2012 and claiming he had more than $3.5 million in debt. Prosecutors say Lindemuth made the purchases without telling his creditors or the bankruptcy trustee. He has pleaded not guilty.

Lindemuth was released from federal custody on several conditions, including that he doesn’t possess or sell any firearms, but that plan fell through when Lindemuth’s relative refused to be the custodian of the firearms.

A status hearing for Lindemuth’s case was scheduled for Monday.

Ellis, Trego counties, southwest Kansas under Freeze Watch Tuesday night

freeze-watch-mapNWS

URGENT – WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DODGE CITY KS
1223 PM CST MON NOV 7 2016

TREGO-ELLIS-SCOTT-LANE-NESS-RUSH-HAMILTON-KEARNY-FINNEY-HODGEMAN-
STANTON-GRANT-HASKELL-GRAY-FORD-MORTON-STEVENS-SEWARD-MEADE-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF…WAKEENEY…PFEIFER…HAYS…
SCOTT CITY…SCOTT STATE LAKE…DIGHTON…NESS CITY…LACROSSE…
SYRACUSE…LAKIN…DEERFIELD…GARDEN CITY…JETMORE…HANSTON…
JOHNSON CITY…ULYSSES…SUBLETTE…SATANTA…CIMARRON…
MONTEZUMA…DODGE CITY…ELKHART…HUGOTON…LIBERAL…MEADE…
PLAINS CITY…FOWLER

1223 PM CST MON NOV 7 2016 /1123 AM MST MON NOV 7 2016/

…FREEZE WATCH IN EFFECT FROM LATE TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH
WEDNESDAY MORNING…

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN DODGE CITY HAS ISSUED A FREEZE
WATCH…WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM LATE TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH
WEDNESDAY MORNING.

* TEMPERATURE…UPPER 20S TO NEAR 30.

* TIMING…COLDEST TEMPERATURES AROUND SUNRISE WEDNESDAY MORNING.

* IMPACTS…SENSITIVE VEGETATION AND CROPS MAY BE DAMAGED OR
KILLED. PROTECT FREEZE SENSITIVE PLANTS BY BRINGING THEM
INDOORS. IF YOU CANNOT BRING THEM IN…COVER THEM WITH LAYERS OF
NEWSPAPERS OR BLANKETS.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A FREEZE WATCH MEANS SUB-FREEZING TEMPERATURES ARE POSSIBLE.
THESE CONDITIONS COULD KILL CROPS AND OTHER SENSITIVE VEGETATION.

Chiefs’ Dee Ford goes from draft bust to breakout star

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Dee Ford was a bust, a laughingstock in Kansas City, the punchline to jokes that usually referenced broken-down pickup trucks and ended up with them never getting where they were supposed to go.

That was last year. Things have changed this year.

Now, the 2014 first-round pick is among the league leader in sacks, the emerging star for a defense that has pushed the Chiefs into AFC West contention, and he’s the one having all the laughs.

Ford says it’s human nature for athletes.

The Chiefs were roundly criticized for drafting Ford with the 23rd overall pick two years ago, when he was rated a second- or third-round talent by many. The Chiefs already had Justin Houston and Tamba Hali at outside linebacker and many other needs on a team in the midst of a rebuild.

Reid says quarterback Alex Smith will start Sunday at Carolina. Nick Foles replaced him against Jacksonville after Smith sustained a head injury against Indianapolis.

Sheriff: Kansas man hospitalized after fight

emergencyPRATT COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Pratt County are investigating a fight that left one man severely beaten.

Just before 4p.m. on Sunday, deputies from the Pratt County Sheriff’s Office and Pratt County Emergency Services were called to the rural Pratt County community of Preston after report of two men fighting, according to a media release.

Pratt County Sheriff’s Officer and an officer from the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks, and Tourism found a severely injured man lying on the ground behind the old school in Preston.

The victim could not communicate and was having trouble breathing.

The victim, identified as 21-year-old Christopher Denio. He was transported to Pratt Regional Medical Center by Pratt County Emergency Services and later flown to Wesley Hospital in Wichita.

Several persons were interviewed at the scene.

No other information was available on Monday morning.

Blue Sky Acres back on Ellis Co. Commission agenda

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The proposed Blue Sky Acres Addition residential development is on the Ellis County Commission agenda once again with the commission considering the final plat of the property.

Earlier this year, the commission chose not to vacate Randall Lane south of Hays, which would connect the proposed development to Highway 183. Randall Lane goes through the VonFeldt Addition. A number of residents living in the VonFeldt division petitioned the county to vacate the road, but the commission voted against the proposal.

The proposed property would have six lots ranging from 2.5 to 3 acres and, if the commission accepts the plat, development can begin on the property.

The Hays Area Planning Commission approved the plat by at 6-1 vote in April.

The commission will also open sealed bids submitted for the purchase of the Tholen Building at 209. W. 12th and discuss snow removal bids.

Monday’s meeting is at 5 p.m. at the Ellis County Administrative Center.

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