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Phillipsburg student helps ‘Put the Brakes on Fatalities’

KSDOT

Phillipsburg Middle School student Makenzie Storz was recently named as one of three northwest Kansas winners in the 2016 Put the Brakes on Fatalities poster contest.

Storz was selected as the winner of the 11- to 13-year-old age division and was awarded a bicycle and helmet from Safe Kids Kansas during an assembly held on Oct. 31 at Phillipsburg Middle School.

A total of 824 kids across Kansas ages 5 to 13 took the time to think about safety and participated in the contest. Put the Brakes on Fatalities Day is a nationwide effort to increase roadway safety and reduce all traffic fatalities and is recognized annually on Oct. 10.

For more information, visit www.ksdot.org/events/PutTheBrakesOnFatalitiesDay.

HPD Activity Log Oct. 31

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The Hays Police Department responded to 15 traffic stops and 3 animal calls Mon., Oct. 31, 2016, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Driving While Suspended/Revoked–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 2:08 AM; 2:34 AM
Suspicious Activity–100 block W 27th St, Hays; 3:05 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–13th and Hall, Hays; 7:40 AM
Create Public Nuisance–300 block W 6th St, Hays; 8:52 AM
Shoplifting–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 10/21 1:25 PM; 1:52 PM
Animal At Large–1700 block Marshall Rd, Hays; 9:58 AM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–500 block Ash St, Hays; 11:21 AM
Found/Lost Property–1900 block Ash St, Hays; 11:31 AM
Drug Offenses/DUI–2600 block Vine St, Hays; 11:53 AM
Animal Cruelty/Neglect–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:23 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:26 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–2300 block E 13th St, Hays; 6:30 PM
Suspicious Activity–1300 block Marshall Rd, Hays; 7:57 PM
Obscenity–2700 block Vine St, Hays; 8:08 PM
Trash Dumping–100 block W 6th St, Hays; 8:12 PM
Intoxicated Subject–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 10:48 PM

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Chiefs defend treatment of Alex Smith’s injuries

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The Kansas City Chiefs defended their treatment of Alex Smith after their quarterback twice had his head slam into the turf in Indianapolis, saying Monday that he passed concussion tests both times.

Chiefs trainer Rick Burkholder said that Smith passed a battery of sideline tests and additional tests in the locker room following the first blow.

When Smith returned to the game and was wobbly after another hit, he again passed all of the standard concussion tests.

The training staff decided at that point to keep Smith from the game anyway.

Running back Spencer Ware did not pass the concussion protocol and was ruled out after taking a similar hit, which has prompted some to question the hardness of the turf in Indianapolis.

Woman jailed for using stolen credit cards across Kansas

Myers
Myers

HUTCHINSON – Law enforcement authorities in Reno County are investigating a suspect for theft and fraud charges.

Police say a Moundridge woman reported that her wallet and purse had been stolen in Moundridge and that her credit cards had been used at multiple businesses around Hutchinson and McPherson.

Police arrested 35-year-old Angela Myers of Springfield, Missouri near Panda Express on East 17th in Hutchinson on Saturday.

Police found numerous items they say had been purchased at various stores in the area including two Walmarts, Walgreens and a Kwik Shop.

Police also say she may have been in a vehicle stolen out of Miami, Oklahoma.

Myers faces potential charges including felony possession of stolen property, three counts of possession of stolen property, seven counts of criminal use of a credit card, three counts of criminal damage, seven counts of theft by deception and possession of drug paraphernalia. They also reported finding a pipe with burnt residue.

Myers is jailed on a bond $11,250 dollars and is expected back in court next Monday for the reading of any formal charges.

Sunny, mild Tuesday

screen-shot-2016-11-01-at-4-53-24-amToday  Mostly sunny, with a high near 74. North wind 7 to 10 mph.

Tonight A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 52. Northeast wind 5 to 7 mph.

Wednesday A 20 percent chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 68. North wind 7 to 14 mph.

Wednesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 42. North wind 6 to 11 mph.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 69. North wind around 7 mph becoming east northeast in the afternoon.

Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 41.

Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 72.

Kansas teenager to be tried as adult in grandma’s death

jail prisonLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A Lawrence teenager accused of killing his grandmother will be tried as an adult.

Douglas County District Court Judge Kay Huff ruled Monday that 17-year-old Jaered Long will be tried as an adult on a first-degree murder charge. He is suspected of stabbing his 67-year-old grandmother, Deborah Bretthauer, to death at her apartment in December.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Long was 16 when his grandmother died. He lived in the apartment with her.

As an adult, Long faces a life sentence if he is convicted.

New Zika study raises concerns for men

gty_malaria_mosquito_nt_110809_wgMALCOLM RITTER, AP Science Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — A study in mice finds that Zika virus infection ravages male mouse testes, and sharply reduces sperm counts and fertility.

That raises a new concern about a possibly overlooked threat to people from the virus. But experts say it’s not at all clear that the same thing happens in men.

Experiments found testes of infected mice shrank about 90 percent by weight, while their output of useful sperm fell by three-quarters on average, and often more. Researchers found that the virus attacks the anatomical structure where sperm are made and reach maturity.

Testosterone levels also fell.

The mouse results appear in a paper released Monday by the journal Nature.

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

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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 at No. 10 Emporia State and take a look ahead at this Saturday’s game in Hays against No. 1 Northwestern Oklahoma State.

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

Police: Kansas man jailed for alleged robbery, aggravated kidnapping

Richard Brazo
Richard Brazo

SALINE COUNTY -Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect for alleged robbery and kidnapping.

Just before 4:30pm. on Saturday, the suspect entered Dallas Liquor, 965 N. Broadway in Salina and purchased two cans of beer, according to Police Captain Mike Sweeney.

As he was exiting the store a clerk observed the suspect picking up two bottles of whiskey.

The clerk confronted the suspect and told him not to return to the store.

Approximately 20 minutes later, the suspect, identified as Richard Brazo, 54, did return and demanded money from the clerk, according to Sweeney.

Brazo allegedly grabbed the clerk by the throat and forced him behind the register. He then fled the store on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Sweeney said police were notified and an officer on patrol observed a man fitting Brazo’s description entering the Hawthorne Apartments, 715 N. 9th Street, and arrested him.

The male clerk was treated by EMS for scrapes on his forearms and scratches and redness on his neck.

Brazo was booked into the Saline County Jail on requested charges that included aggravated robbery, aggravated kidnapping, misdemeanor theft and felony obstruction, according to Sweeney.

GOP’s Yoder raises $508K in October in hot Kan. 3rd district race

Congressman Yoder meeting with voters in Shawnee earlier this month
Congressman Yoder meeting with voters in Shawnee earlier this month

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican U.S. Rep. Kevin Yoder raised more than $508,000 in cash contributions in October for his re-election in the 3rd Congressional District of Kansas.

The fundraising came as the national Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was spending nearly $1.1 million to help Democratic challenger Jay Sidie.

Federal Election Commission reports also showed Monday that a Republican super-PAC has spent more than $734,000 to help Yoder.

But Yoder also is fundraising aggressively. He’s raised about $328,000 since Oct. 20, and the total includes more than $67,000 from fellow Republicans in the House or Senate.

Sidie has raised more than $105,000 in October. His total includes $15,000 from House Democrats.

Democrats see Yoder as vulnerable because he’s backing GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump and because Republican Gov. Sam Brownback faces a political backlash.

Suspect in Kan. domestic terror plot: Detention hearing ‘ridiculous’

Gavin Wright,  Curtis Allen and Patrick Stein were y are charged with domestic terrorism
Gavin Wright, Curtis Allen and Patrick Stein were y are charged with domestic terrorism

ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A man accused of plotting to bomb a western Kansas apartment complex where 120 Somali immigrants live says federal prosecutors didn’t share their evidence with his defense attorney until 10 minutes before a detention hearing.

Patrick Stein called The Associated Press from jail on Monday. Stein said he could not now respond to the government’s accusations until he talks with his attorney because jailhouse calls are monitored and recorded.

The government presented text messages and other evidence during an Oct. 21 detention hearing.

Prosecutors say that information was provided to the defense as soon as it was available.

Stein and two others have pleaded not guilty to conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction in a plot to bomb a Garden City apartment complex.

Lowell Russell Flora

lowell-floraLowell Russell Flora was born February 16, 1924 on a farm near Quinter to Norman and Lizzie (Delp) Flora, 7th of 10 children. He passed away on October 28, 2016 at the Gove County Long Term Care at the age of 92 with his wife Cora and daughters at his side.

Lowell grew up in the Quinter area, graduated from Quinter High School in 1942. Lowell attended Fort Hays State College for one year then took a job in San Diego as a dock worker for the U.S. Naval Air Station. Lowell enlisted in the U.S. Marines in 1944. He was sent to the Marshall Islands and then to Guam where he learned to be a cook. From there he was sent to Iwo Jima to secure the island. He had medals for Expert Rifleman & Marksman. He was responsible for preparing the food and hauling it to the men at the front lines. 1945 he was sent to China for 6 months and then on June 14, 1946 was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps with the rank of Lance Corporal. Upon returning to Quinter he worked at the Coop, assisted in the construction of the Sheridan County Dam and farmed with his dad. During this time he received his pilot’s license for small planes which he utilized to swoop over the Bittel family farm and impress his sweetheart.

October 21, 1950 he married Cora Evelyn Bittel at St Michael Catholic Church in Collyer. They moved to the Flora farm seven miles northeast of Quinter where they raised their daughters and farmed until 2008. Lowell also worked for the Union Pacific Railroad and was a custom wheat harvester in Oklahoma, South and North Dakota. Lowell’s love and conservation of the land was evident in the care of his crops of wheat and irrigated corn, cows and calves and pigs he raised.

He was a member of the American Legion where he served as commander for 2 years and was part of the honor guard. Lowell was a member of the 2012 Honor Flight to the World War II Memorial. This fulfilled a dream of his to go to Washington D.C. to see the WWII Memorial. He belonged to the Knights of Columbus, St. Michael Catholic Church in Collyer and after moving into Quinter, was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Park, Kansas.

Lowell is survived by his wife Cora, of 66 years and 3 daughters, Gayleen Bernal and husband Jesse, Garden City; Coleen Tummons and husband Dwight, Quinter, and Mickie Mason and husband, David, Mulvane. 11 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren. He is also survived by his sisters, Rosa Pyles, Denver; Sara Lee Bentley, Shields, Angie Fishburn and husband Al, Lawrence and brother Sylvus and wife Martha, Roanoke, West Virginia. Brother in-law Charles Bittel and wife Pat, Blue Springs, Mo. He was preceded in death by his parents; three sisters, Norma Kilpatrick, Sue Demarteau, and Dorothy Reinicker; and two brothers, Samuel and D. Allen Flora.

Lowell will especially be missed by his family and the staff of the Gove County Medical Center Long Term Care and Hospital. He loved being called Mr. Wilson, which was part of his sense of humor and grin that brightened their day. He also loved being kissed on his bald head by his grandchildren. He was a loving father and grandfather, farmer and cattleman, hunter, gardener and was extremely patriotic and loved his country like the land he cared for.
Mass of Christian Burial will be 10:00 a.m., Friday, November 4, 2016 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Park. Burial will be in the Baker Township Cemetery, Quinter with military honors provided by the United States Marines.

Visitation will be Thursday evening, from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. with a parish vigil to follow at 7:00, at the funeral home in Quinter.



Memorial contributions are suggested to Gove County LTC to be used for a resident blanket warmer. Checks made to the organization may be sent to Schmitt Funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS 67752.

Condolences may be sent by signing the guest book at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Chardell Myers Parke

Chardell Myers Parke, 59, Hays, died Sunday, October 30, 2016, at her home after a short battle with pancreatic cancer.

She was born January 16, 1957 in Sherman, Texas, the daughter of Carl and Carolyn (Ogburn) Myers and spent her youth in Garden City, Kansas.

She married Patrick Parke on January 5, 1980, in Garden City. She received degrees from Colby Community College (Animal Hospital Technology), Kansas State University (General Sciences), and Topeka School of Medical Technology. She worked her entire career in health care, most recently as Laboratory Manager for Quest Diagnostics in Hays.

She served on the USD 489 Board of Education for eight years, the Head Start Advisory Board, Barton County Community College Medical Laboratory Technology Advisory Board, Northwest Kansas Technical College Medical Assistant Advisory Board, and as a volunteer for Kansas Special Olympics. She was an instructor for the Hays Pathology Laboratory School of Medical Technology.

Survivors include her husband; Patrick of the home in Hays, a son; Eli Parke (Tamvana) of Madison, Wisconsin, a daughter; Carlee Hawkins (Jon) of York, Nebraska, a granddaughter; Finleigh Grace Hawkins of York, Nebraska, her mother; Carolyn Myers (Dick Woods) of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and three brothers; Craig Myers (Ann) of Wamego, Kansas, Rear Admiral Ross A. Myers, USN (Deidre) of San Diego, California, and Mike Myers (Cindy Funk) of Portland, Oregon.

She was preceded in death by her father; Carl Myers, and her grandparents; Merle and Roberta Myers and Everett and Bernice Ogburn.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11:00 am on Friday, November 4, 2016 at St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, 2901 E. 13th, with Fr. Jarett Konrade and Fr. Dan Scheetz officiating. Private family inurnment will be in Christ the King cemetery in WaKeeney, Kansas. Visitation will be on Thursday from 4:00 pm until 8:00 and on Friday from 10:00 am until service time, all at St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church. A parish vigil service will be at 7:00 pm on Thursday at the church and all vigil attendees are invited to wear purple in memory of Chardell.

Memorials are suggested to Hospice of Hays Medical Center or to the FHSU Foundation to establish a medical technology scholarship, in care of the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street, Hays Kansas, 67601.

Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com or via email at [email protected].

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