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Kansas man jailed, charged with child sex crimes

RILEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Riley County are investigating a man on child sex crimes.

At 7 p.m. on Wednesday, police arrested John Gaver, 22, on requested charges of criminal sodomy of a child between 14 and 16 years old and four counts of soliciting a child between 14 and 16 years of age.

On Friday, the Riley County Attorney formerly filed charges on 9 counts of criminal sodomy.

Gave remains jailed on a bond of $160,000.

FHSU’s Tiger Debs will have dance clinic next month in Hays

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The Fort Hays State University Tiger Debs will have a dance clinic next month for children pre-K through fifth grade.

The clinic will be at 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 18, at Gross Memorial Coliseum, with registration beginning at 9 a.m.

The $30 registration fee includes a T-shirt and the chance to perform on the court at halftime of the FHSU women’s basketball game on Feb. 21.

The deadline to register is Feb. 1. Register online at fhsu.edu/tigerdebs/clinic or contact Courtney Kanzenbach at [email protected].

Click the image for more details.

Extension program will examine ‘The Food and Mood Connection’

Linda Beech
Linda Beech

After the indulgence of the holidays, many think about losing weight at this time of year. In fact, weight loss is annually one of the most common New Year’s resolutions.

The Ellis County Extension Office will offer the free educational program “Emotional Appetite: The Food and Mood Connection” at noon Friday, Jan. 27, at the Extension meeting room, 601 Main, Hays.

Physical hunger is different from food cravings triggered by stress, boredom, and other emotions. This noon-hour program will help participants differentiate between physical and emotional hunger, identify emotional eating triggers, and find non-food activities to manage stress or other emotional food cravings. Linda Beech will be the instructor.

Register in advance for this free program at 785-628-9430 or [email protected] to ensure adequate materials. A minimum attendance is needed to hold this program.

Now That’s Rural: Walter Anderson, first fast-food hamburger chain, White Castle

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

What was the first fast food hamburger chain in the world, and where did it begin? You are correct if you answered White Castle in Wichita. This innovative company was begun by a man from rural Kansas. It’s today’s Kansas Profile.

Walter Anderson was born in 1880. He became a short order cook. In 1916, he opened his first diner in a converted streetcar in downtown Wichita.

Walt Anderson liked to experiment in the kitchen. According to legend, one day he became so frustrated with how his meatballs were sticking to the griddle that he smashed one with a spatula. With that, the flat patty was born.

Anderson found that starting with a mound of fresh beef, pressing it into a flat square and poking five well-placed holes in the meat meant that he could cook the burger thoroughly without having to flip it. He also found that cooking the patty on a bed of chopped onions on the grill with the bun on top permitted all of the flavors to permeate the bun.

His hamburgers were so popular that he wanted to expand to additional locations. He enlisted the help of a real estate agent named Billy Ingram. As the men got acquainted, they decided to go into business together on a hamburger restaurant.

But, there was a problem. In 1906, Upton Sinclair had published a book called “The Jungle,” which exposed the unsanitary meat processing methods of the time. This book caused consumers to worry about the safety of hamburger.

Anderson and Ingram decided on an approach to food safety which was ahead of its time. They insisted on absolute cleanliness and transparency. They wanted to make their restaurant sparkling clean and white. They equipped their restaurant with white porcelain enamel on steel exteriors, stainless steel interiors, and employees outfitted with spotless uniforms. The kitchen was also viewable by the public so it would be clear that the food was prepared under highly sanitary conditions.

For a name, they combined two words that suggested purity and solidity: White Castle. For the shape of their building, the two men were inspired by the castle-like look of the water tower in downtown Chicago so they used similar design features for their restaurant.

In 1921, they built their first building on the northwest corner of First and Main in Wichita. They used Walt Anderson’s cooking style and sold the hamburgers for five cents each. The hamburgers were small and went down so easy that they would later be called “sliders.”

The restaurant was so successful that it expanded to a second location in El Dorado and then beyond. In 1923 they expanded to Omaha. Before 1930, White Castle had branched into 12 major cities in the Midwest as well as New York and New Jersey.

Of course, at that time there was no such thing as a fast food chain. The company had to establish centralized bakeries, meat supply plants, and warehouses to supply itself.

The company’s business design of multiple locations and standardized products and menus make White Castle credited as the first fast food hamburger chain in the world.

In 1933, the company made a transition in ownership. Billy Ingram bought out Walt Anderson’s interest. Ingram then moved the company’s headquarters to Columbus, Ohio so as to be more centrally located near the new restaurants that were being built in the east.

White Castle continued to expand and innovate. It was the first fast food chain to reach the landmark of one billion hamburgers sold, which it did in 1961. Eventually, however, other fast food chains would outgrow White Castle.

Today, White Castle has more than 400 restaurants, although none of those are in Kansas. Billy Ingram’s descendants still control the company.

It all began with a small town short order cook named Walt Anderson. He was born in the rural community of St. Mary’s, Kansas, population 2,221 people. Now, that’s rural.

What was the first fast food hamburger chain in the world? It was White Castle, created by an entrepreneur who made a difference with innovation in the food industry. Now, would you like fries with that?

49th annual High Plains Barbershop show is scheduled for April

Courtesy photo
Courtesy photo

Submitted

Hays High Plains Barbershop Chapter A022 is a nonprofit, charitable, educational organization that promotes singing in schools in central and northwest Kansas. The chorus is comprised of forty-two members who accumulatively drive over a thousand miles per week to rehearse. The chapter loves to sing and many have benefited from the chapter’s donations.

The Hays High Plains Barbershop Chapter A022 in 2017 made donations to Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas, Fort Hays State University choral music department and Trinity Lutheran Church, where they have rehearsed in the basement for 30+ years.

They also donated to Full Chord Press and the Central States District college quartet contest fund.

This year’s show, the 49th annual, is April 8 at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center. The headline quartets for this show are the Barbershop Society’s International 2016 Third Place Finisher “Main Street” from Florida and an International Competitor Sweet Adelines quartet “Legacy” from the Kansas City area.

This show brings some of the finest entertainment to be presented in the Central States District this spring thanks to the generous support of the surrounding areas. Ad sales that build the chapter’s fund are now beginning.

🎥 Jacobs appointed to fill vacant Hays City Commission seat

Newly appointed Hays City Commissioner Sandy Jacobs shakes hands with other commissioners Thursday night. She will be sworn into office Jan. 26 to fill the unexpired term of Eber Phelps.
Newly appointed Hays City Commissioner Sandy Jacobs shakes hands with other commissioners Thursday night. She will be sworn into office Jan. 26 to fill the unexpired term of Eber Phelps.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

“We could have tossed a dart and been just fine.”

Hays Vice-Mayor James Meier, his fellow city commissioners and even candidate James Leiker all agreed Thursday night there could be no wrong choice among the six candidates vying for the unexpired term of Eber Phelps.

“This has been gut-wrenching decision,” added Commissioner Lance Jones, who said he “met personally with everybody who put an application in. And, James is right. There is not a bad selection out of this group. Everyone was qualified for this position.”

During last night’s special session, the candidates, Bill Ring, Sandy Jacobs, Marty Patterson, James Leiker, Brad Pendergast, and Ron Mellick, first delivered short remarks about their desires to serve as a city commissioner.

A motion was then made by Meier to appoint Sandy Jacobs to the position, seconded by Jones, and then unanimously approved. Commissioner Henry Schwaller participated in the special session via phone. Although Schwaller said he “would like to see (former city commissioner) Ron Mellick reinstated, I’ve known Sandy for years and I know she’ll do a fine job.”

Jacobs is the executive director of Heartland Community Foundation in Hays and an active community volunteer. She is a retired bank executive with more than 40 years of financial experience and said that’s “a skill set I can bring to the table with the challenges I see and the budget issues in the near future.”

“The strongest thing I’ve done in my career and through my volunteerism and what is in my soul, is that I want to work to ensure sustainable economic growth for this community.

“My passion lives and breathes in the city of Hays and the citizens of Hays. I think that’s what it’s all about,” Jacobs concluded.

Jacobs will be sworn into office Thu., Jan. 26, during the next regular commission meeting. The unexpired term of Phelps, now the 111th Dist. state representative, expires in January 2018.

The commissioners encouraged all the candidates to run for in 2018. According to City Manager Toby Dougherty,  there will be three seats open on the city commission.

Cloudy, mild with a chance for Friday showers

Friday A 30 percent chance of showers, mainly between 8am and 1pm. Areas of dense fog before 8am. Otherwise, cloudy, with a high near 46. Light and variable wind becoming south southeast 5 to 7 mph in the morning.

Friday Night Cloudy, then gradually becoming partly cloudy, with a low around 30. West wind 6 to 9 mph.

SaturdaySunny, with a high near 53. West wind 5 to 8 mph becoming north northeast in the afternoon.

Saturday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 30. East northeast wind 6 to 11 mph becoming north northwest after midnight.

SundaySunny, with a high near 51.

Sunday NightMostly clear, with a low around 25.

MondaySunny, with a high near 53.

Kansas man dead, taxi driver arrested after crash

Thursday fatal crash photo courtesy WHO Radio

POLK COUNTY – A Kansas man died and another was injured in an accident just after 4 a.m. on Thursday in Polk County Iowa.

Polk County Sheriff’s Department reported a United Taxi Cab driven by Mohamed Diriy, 29, was eastbound on NE 58th Avenue and NE 22nth Street south of Ankeny.

The vehicle left the road at a T-intersection and entered a ravine.

A passenger Shawn Koltiska, 29, August, Kansas, was pronounced dead at the scene.

Diriye -photo Polk Co.

Another passenger Brian Foster, 48, Garden Plain, was hospitalized.

Deputies arrested Diriye and he was charged with 2nd offense OWI, Homicide by vehicle and two counts of serious injury in connection with the crash, according to the sheriff’s department.

Kan. man jailed after fatal chase, crash claims ineffective counsel

Stotts-photo KDOC

TOPEKA – A  hearing on Thursday for a Kansas man convicted of attempted manufacture of methamphetamine and attempted 2nd degree murder, over the defendant’s civil filing claiming ineffective counsel. 

Paul Stotts, 28, claimed that he had ineffective counsel prior to his trial and his attorney David Holmes failed to inform him of a plea offer from the state.

Stotts continues to argue that if he had known about the offer which would have reduced his time in prison to around 13 and a half years, he would have taken it. 

The Kansas Court of Appeals ruled that he failed to demonstrate a reasonable probability that he would have accepted the plea offer at the time it was offered.

But, in court his attorney said what they failed to do at the appellate level was whether he was prejudiced by not hearing about the offer.

Stotts told the judge that he was barely 18 at the time of his arrest and knew nothing of how the legal system worked. He says the plea offer was mentioned in court, but didn’t feel he could oppose his attorney who he thought was working for his best interest. He says it wasn’t until he went to prison that he learned what he could or couldn’t do even during his trial. 

Judge Trish Rose took the issue under advisement and indicated it may be some time before she issues any ruling. 

Stotts is serving a near 25-year sentence after being convicted of attempted 2nd degree murder for crashing his vehicle into another, badly injuring the other driver during a high-speed chase through Reno County in March of 2007.

The state says it was intentional, while Stotts maintains it was an accident. He was also found guilty of having items consistent with a meth lab inside his vehicle, two counts of aggravated battery, and several counts of flee and elude.

3 charged with smuggling liquid meth in gas tank into Kansas

KANSAS CITY – Three men from Mexico appeared in federal court in Topeka today on charges of smuggling liquid methamphetamine into Kansas City, Kan., in the gas tank of a semi-trailer truck, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

The defendants are alleged to have smuggled more than 1,000 pounds of liquid methamphetamine that they pumped out of the gas tank of the truck.

Heraclio Estrella-Montero, 30, Yoan Alejandro Castillo-Zamora, 30, and Fernando Chavez-Rodriquez, 40, all of Mexico, are charged with one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine.

According to court papers, the men were arrested in Kansas City, Kan., about 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13, after pumping the liquid methamphetamine from the truck into five-gallon buckets.

If convicted they face a penalty of not less than 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $10 million.

KHP: 3 hospitalized after near head-on crash

FORD COUNTY – Three people were injured in an accident just before 6p.m. on Thursday in Ford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2006 Toyota Sienna driven by Theodore Allen Fuller, 31, Wright, was eastbound on U.S. 50 five miles east of Dodge City.

The vehicle crossed the center line and collided with a westbound 2013 Ford F150 driven by Duane D. Boyd, 70, Offerle.

Wright, Boyd and a passenger in the Toyota Maria G. Fuller, 33, Wright, were transported to Western Plains Medical Center.

The drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Tigers rally from 15 down to beat Missouri Western

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

JOSEPH, Mo. – Rob Davis shook of a slow start to score a game-high 20 points, Brady Werth added a career-best 19 along with 11 rebounds and Trey O’Neil scored all of his 14 points in the second half as Fort Hays State rallied from a 15 point first half deficit to beat Missouri Western 74-69.

The Tigers (10-6, 4-4 MIAA) held the Griffons (6-12, 2-7 MIAA) without a field goal over the final five minutes of the first half to pull within five at halftime. A Brady Werth dunk capped an 8-0 run to give the Tigers a 42-41 lead with 14:40 to play, a lead they would never give up.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

The Tigers shot 50-percent in the second half and 45-percent for the game. The Griffons hit 58-percent in the second half and 51-percent for the game but FHSU pulled down 12 offensive rebounds, outscoring MWSU 12-0 on second chance points.

Dense Fog Advisory in effect until 10 a.m. Friday

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NWS

URGENT – WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DODGE CITY KS
838 PM CST THU JAN 19 2017

TREGO-ELLIS-RUSH-HAMILTON-KEARNY-STANTON-GRANT-MORTON-STEVENS-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF…WAKEENEY…PFEIFER…HAYS…LACROSSE…
SYRACUSE…LAKIN…DEERFIELD…JOHNSON CITY…ULYSSES…ELKHART…
HUGOTON

838 PM CST THU JAN 19 2017 /738 PM MST THU JAN 19 2017/

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…DENSE FOG ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CST /9 AM MST/
FRIDAY…

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN DODGE CITY HAS ISSUED A DENSE FOG
ADVISORY…WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CST /9 AM MST/ FRIDAY.

* TIMING…LATE THIS EVENING THROUGH MID MORNING FRIDAY.

* VISIBILITY…AS LOW AS A QUARTER MILE OR LESS.

* IMPACTS…HAZARDOUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS DUE TO POOR VISIBILITY.
FREEZING FOG COULD CAUSE SLICK SPOTS ON ROADS AND SIDEWALKS
WHERE TEMPERATURES ARE BELOW FREEZING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A DENSE FOG ADVISORY MEANS VISIBILITIES WILL FREQUENTLY BE
REDUCED TO LESS THAN ONE QUARTER MILE. IF DRIVING…SLOW DOWN…
USE YOUR HEADLIGHTS…AND LEAVE PLENTY OF DISTANCE AHEAD OF YOU.

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