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Debate to delay new amusement park regs on hold after Kan. toddler’s carnival death

Presley-photo Gofundme

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators put off a debate on delaying tougher regulations for amusement parks following the death of a young girl injured at a Wichita carnival.

The House had been scheduled Friday to debate a bill delaying the new rules for a year until July 2018. Lawmakers approved the tougher regulations last month in response to the death of a colleague’s son on a waterslide last summer.

The new law requires annual inspections of rides by qualified inspectors or certified engineers. The state Department of Labor sought a delay over concerns that some operators couldn’t comply by July.

But the Wichita Eagle reported Friday that the family of a 15-month-old girl issued a statement through a local hospital that she had died after being critically injured at a carnival May 12.

Friends and family established a Gofundme account to assist the child’s family.

Heavy Rains Flood Legislative Research Offices At Kan. Statehouse

By STEPHEN KORANDA

Raney Gilliland points out damage to Statehouse offices of legislative researchers. A 10-inch pipe that carries rainwater from the Statehouse roof failed during storms early Friday.
STEPHEN KORANDA / KANSAS PUBLIC RADIO

Heavy rains early Friday flooded some Statehouse offices and displaced some of the researchers who work for Kansas lawmakers.

Maintenance staff and members of the Kansas Legislative Research Department worked Friday to clean up and sort through water-damaged books and documents in the ground-floor offices.

Raney Gilliland, director of the department, said a 10-inch pipe that carries rainwater from the Statehouse roof failed during the storm.

“With the deluge that we had last night, this collar broke and all of the water from the roof ended up in (our) office,” he said.

Water cascaded down onto books, a desk and file cabinets in one of the offices. The water then flooded adjacent offices and nearby parts of the building.

The nonpartisan department conducts research and compiles documents for legislators, including the financial estimates connected to spending proposals.

This may be an especially inopportune time for the flooding to occur. Lawmakers are wrestling with tax and budget issues as they work to end the session, and members of the research staff provide information that they use when making those decisions.

“We’re always busy, but we’re very busy right now trying to help the Legislature make its final decisions,” Gilliland said.

The offices of at least seven staff members were affected. They moved Friday to temporary workstations.

“I think the Legislature will not notice any change in our work. We’re pretty adaptable,” Gilliland said. “We have lots of hands on deck down here.”

Gilliland said he doesn’t yet know a cost to repair the damage. The Statehouse underwent $300 million in renovations that were completed toward the end of 2013.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for kcur.org, a partner in the Kansas News Service.

Officials ID man, expected charges in Wednesday high-speed chase

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Officials have identified the Missouri man arrested Wednesday following a high-speed chase that ended in Palco.

Ellis County Attorney Tom Drees said Zachery Vaughan, 21, is currently being held on probable cause of two counts of felony fleeing and eluding law enforcement, felony possession of a stolen vehicle, misdemeanor possession of a stolen tag, and possession of stolen financial cards.

Vaughan, who told authorities he was homeless, allegedly stole a vehicle from Kansas City, Kan., and then took a vehicle tag from Ottawa County and a purse from Jefferson County, Drees said.

According to authorities, when he got to Ellis County, he stopped at a rural residence and asked to brush his teeth. The homeowner denied access to the man and, suspecting something was suspicious, called law enforcement. A Kansas Highway Patrol trooper located the car and attempted to stop the man on Highway 183 but he fled on country road, leading law enforcement officials on a chase reaching speeds of 120 mph.

The chase ended in Palco when the man crashed his vehicle. Police said he then entered a house and broke out the side window trying to get away. Officers were forced to use a taser on the man when he did not obey their commands.

Vaughan’s bond hearing was Thursday in Ellis County District Court. He is being held on $10,000 bond.

Sheriff: Naked woman on Kan. highway may have jumped from vehicle

Cullison, Kansas is 9 miles west of Pratt-google map

PRATT COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Pratt County are investigating an accident involving someone reportedly jumping from a vehicle.

Just before 6:30 a.m. Friday, a call came into Pratt County Emergency Dispatch of a “naked woman” on the side of the Highway 54 one mile east of Cullison, according to a media release.

Units from the Pratt County Sheriff’s office, Pratt County EMS and Kansas Highway Patrol responded and found a 44-year old woman on the north ditch bleeding from injuries that she sustained from jumping from a moving vehicle.

She was transported to the Pratt Regional Medical Center for treatment.

No additional details were released.

Police: 16-year-old reports alleged rape, burglary in Manhattan

RILEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Riley County are investigating an alleged sexual assault, aggravated battery and burglary.

A 16-year-old girl told police a suspect known to her forced his way into her residence in Manhattan and raped her, according to the Friday morning Riley County Police incident report.

This is the 17th rape reported in Manhattan in the first quarter of 2017, compared to 8 over the same period last year.

Manhattan authorities reported a total of 40 rapes in 2016.

No additional details were released.

Pavilion groundbreaking rescheduled for Wednesday

Downtown Hays Development Corporation announced the rescheduled date for the Downtown Pavilion Project ground breaking. The ceremony, which was scheduled for this afternoon, will now take place at 4 p.m. Wednesday, May 24  at 10th and Main streets.

Bloom said,”We once again apologize for any inconvenience, but hope you can join us at the new date and time.”

 

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Pop-Up museum featured at Symphony at Sunset

Pop Up Museum at
Pop Up Museum at Eisenhower Presidential Library grounds, Abilene

ABILENE – The Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home will again feature a Pop-Up Museum in conjunction with the Symphony at Sunset event on June 3. This “museum without walls” encourages community members to become museum curators for the day. Imagine a potluck comprised of an object and/or story related to the Pop-Up theme to share with others.

“Just because an item from the past isn’t in a museum doesn’t mean it isn’t a valuable piece of history,” said Pam Sanfilippo, Eisenhower Presidential Library education specialist. “A Pop-Up Museum gives everyone the chance to share their keepsakes with others, creating lasting memories from a temporary (and fun!) experience.”

Pop-Up Museum Details:
Theme: Best of the West
When: Saturday, June 3, 2017, 4-7 p.m.
Where: Pop-Up Museum tent on the Eisenhower Presidential Library grounds
What: Items relating to the Old West. Examples may include a photo or artwork related to the West, a favorite Western book or music, or objects related to the West, especially the Chisholm Trail. Bring them and share your memories with others! (Please note that for security reasons, weapons are not permitted on Federal property.) Tables, chairs and blank labels (for you to fill in) will be provided for you to display and tell about your item.

How: If you have questions or to reserve a space, call Pam Sanfilippo at 785.263.6700 or email [email protected] if you would like to showcase some items in the Pop Up Museum.

In addition to the Pop Up Museum, the Arts Council of Dickinson County will sponsor a tent providing an array of activities for kids of all ages including the opportunity to create thank you cards for veterans.The Commanding General’s Mounted Color Guard from Fort Riley will perform and several food vendors open at 4 p.m. Plan to come early, enjoy good food and fun activities, followed by an evening of great music.

The music begins with KWU Cello and Violin Camp Recital at 5:30 p.m. in the Visitors Center Auditorium, Everyday Lights Concert at 5:30 p.m followed by the 1st Infantry Division Band at 7 p.m. and the Salina Symphony taking the stage at 8:30 p.m.

Lincoln students raise money through sale of 3D toys

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Student Council members at Lincoln Elementary School donated a check for $150 to the High Plains Humane Society from the sale of 3D printed toys.
Student Council members at Lincoln Elementary School donated a check for $150 to the High Plains Humane Society from the sale of 3D printed toys.

Little yellow boats, shark combs, tops and T-Rexes sold to fellow students lead to a Lincoln Student Council donation to the Humane Society of the High Plains.

The school received a grant from the Dane Hansen Foundation to purchase a 3D printer.

The students used an array of preset designs to create small toys that they sold to classmates at the school.

Regina Hammerschmidt, computer lab teacher, said the students will experiment with their own designs next year.

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Examples of toys that Lincoln Elementary School students made with their new 3D printer.

She said the work incorporates a lot of research and trial and error to learn how to translate a two-dimensional design into a three-dimensional object.

The students used some of the toys they created to create stop-motion movies with their tablets. Hammerschmidt said the activities include a lot of Science Technology Engineering and Math (STEM) learning.

The $150 check that the students presented to Humane Society will go toward medical needs of the animals at the shelter, including spay and neuter.

Early Hays rock band The Flippers featured in new book

By CRISTINA JANNEY
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The Twist was in, and all the girls swooned over Elvis. The new rock-’n’-roll sound was all the rage.

One group of guys from St. Joseph Military Academy in Hays with their duck-tail haircuts and white dinner jackets brought this new break-out music to local proms and dances. They were called the Flippers.

The story of the band and this early rock history is told in a new book by fellow St. Joseph student Darrell Mudd. The book is called “The Original Flippers.” It is available from Amazon and is a compilation of seven of the band’s members’ memories from the late ’50s to early ’60s.

Proceeds from the sale of the book will go to Thomas More Prep-Marian, and band members and the author will be back in Hays in September for the TMP homecoming for book signings. Gella’s Diner will even name a beer for the band.

Some of the band members said their time in the Flippers was the best time in their lives. For others, it was a jumping off point for a lifelong career and love of music.

 

Although some of the band members had played in the St. Joseph marching or jazz band, the players were mostly self-taught.

John Cooke Fross recalled picking out tunes on an old wide body guitar in Terry Wierman’s basement. His parents bought that first guitar on payments from Montgomery Ward.

By the time Fross was 16, the band was making good money, (about $10 to $15 per member per dance). Fross and Wierman bought brand-new Fender Startocasters for about $300 each. After Fross left the band, he traded his for a $150 air conditioner.

“I had a wife and a son. That is what we needed,” he said.

Wierman wore his Stratocaster out playing in a second incarnation of the Flippers, The Fabulous Flippers, that toured nationwide. Today those guitars in good condition could be worth as much as $38,000.

Eventually other locals joined the group: Lee Allen Leiker on vocals, Tom Bunker on piano, Dennis Rohr on drums, and Jim Gross on sax.

The band had no sheet music. They listened to records of their favorite singers and duplicated the sound.

“Thank God for 45s,” Gross, sax player, said.

Elvis, Ricky Nelson, and Gene Vincent, who is known for “Be Bop A Lula,” all became staples. The band often kicked off its concerts with “Say Mama” by Buddy Dean and the Enchantments, and ended the evening with Ritchie Valens “Oh Donna.”book-cover

The band played its first concert in 1958 at a New Year’s Dance at the Sunflower Ballroom. The band members were not sure of their own talents or how the music would be received, so they brought along an accordion player who could step in and play German polkas if the crowd became restless.

He was never needed. The audience loved the new sound.

“The first song we played was Johnny Cash’s ‘Folsom Prison Blues.’ They went nuts. We didn’t have much use for the accordion player,” Fross said.

The Flipper name came by chance when one of the band members bought a pair of flipper-style hub caps for his car. The band members all quickly agreed to moniker.

Before long, the Flippers were booked most Friday and Saturdays at dances and proms around the area. An owner at a theater in Lenora, Kansas, booked the band to a regular gig.

The theater would show a movie and then remove the chairs and create a dance floor.

“They did the twist and free dance. How wild it got depend on how much beer they had. Three or four beers will do that to you,” Wierman said.

flipper-photo-lees-basement

“It was a great deal of fun. I think it was all legal. None of us ended up in jail. It must have been all legal,” he said of the band’s concerts.

The guys sometimes would have a few beers before or after a show. One night, Dennis Rohr got a little carried away. He drank a case.

“I was totally wiped. I was crazy,” he said. “We had to play at this prom. They gave me a shower and coffee. At one point, I was up in a tree, and they couldn’t get me out.”

However, Rohr said he still honored his faith and family on Sunday morning.

“We might be out to 3 or 4 a.m. We might go to a party afterward, but I never missed church Sunday morning. I had to pray to God for all the stuff I did at the dance the night before,” he said.

Although Lee Leiker was considered by some of his bad mates as the group’s heart throb, there was no leader of the band.

“We had camaraderie,” Fross said. “We didn’t have a leader. We didn’t have disagreements. If everyone didn’t like it, we didn’t do it. Everybody booked dances.”

Although the young men all attended a Catholic military school, they received little pushback from their teachers and elders.

“The parents liked it,” Gross said. “It was something that got the kids off the streets on Friday nights.”

Except for their hair. The cadets were required to wear military haircuts and a couple of the band members were reprimanded for wearing their hair slicked back into duck tails.

Father Timothy Gottschalk, who Wierman said hated the music, even let the group practice in the St. Joseph’s band room for a time.

When the group wasn’t practicing at the school, they pulled a piano up to a door at one of the member’s houses and played in the yard. People from the neighborhood would stop by to listen at the outdoor impromptu concerts. Even police officers would swing by and linger to listen to the band.

Band members also said they enjoyed playing outdoor concerts on top of the swimming pool.

“It was a wonderful atmosphere,” Wierman said. “I won’t mind doing that again.”

The band even sent a letter to Capitol Records, but they were so good at emulating other artists, Capitol told them they couldn’t record the band because they didn’t have an original sound.

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The original Flippers were together until 1964 when the guys went on to divergent lives.

Fross unfortunately no longer plays guitar. He broke his hand as a young man, and the bones did not set properly. He can no longer play certain chords.

“It about killed me when that happened,” he said.

Rohr, 73, took a while to recover from his party days with the band. He flunked out of college twice, but eventually graduated with a master’s degree.

“I would have been well educated a lot earlier if it had not been for rock ’n’ roll,” he said.

He lives in North Dakota and still plays drums.

Leiker, 78, became a family man and still lives in Hays.

“In 1960, I got married and, in 1962, I quit the band,” he said. “I had a family, and it was a whole different world.”

He now has four children, seven grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren and says all of the kids and grandkids are getting copies of the book. Although he doesn’t sing much anymore, he still loves music and has fond memories of his time int he band.

“It was a lot of fun growing up,” he said. “I would never change anything. In the band, we are all like one. We all had fun together, That’s how I grew up.”

Gross, 72, briefly co-owned a record shop in Hays, The Record Village, which was located off Vine Street.

He said his time in band made a great deal of difference in his later life.

“It gave me confidence,” he said. “It made a lot of difference in my career. I was managing plants with 300 people working in them. When I was in upper management, I knew how to deal with people.”

Bunker, 79, had a lifelong career in music and is still conducting choruses today, including a large chorus with Idaho State University for the opening of a new Mormon Temple. His children took up music as well, including a daughter who has played with Garth Brooks.ba720d4fd3454f67b4ccfa11b6e2ba64

Wierman, 73, went on to play in The Fabulous Flippers and toured the nation. The band was know for their single “Harlem Shuffle.”

The time in the band took its toll from poor food and little sleep from constantly being on the road. He said he saw a lot playing rock in the ’60s. The nation was changing.

“In the bigger cities, there were riots, vandalism and looting,” he said. “It was not safe. … It was a wild time in a disturbing sense.”

Wierman abandoned touring in 1969 and took a construction job with his brother in Hays, where he lives today.

“I have no regrets,” he said. “I play still occasionally, but my hands are not as good as they used to be. I blame it on my mom for having me pray too much over the Rosary.”

Wierman summed up his music experiences very simply, “It has been one hell of a ride. I enjoyed it.”

Ellis County unemployment rate at 2.6 percent in April

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Preliminary estimates reported by the Kansas Department of Labor and Bureau of Labor Statistics show the April seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 3.7 percent. This was down from 3.8 percent in March and down from 4.1 percent in April 2016.

In Ellis County, the jobless rate was 2.6 percent. All northwest Kansas counties has unemployment rates below 4 percent, with most posting rates below 3 percent.

Greeley County in far western Kansas posted the state’s lowest unemployment rate at 1.9 percent, while Rooks County had the highest jobless rate in northwest Kansas at 3.9 percent.

Seasonally adjusted job estimates indicate total Kansas nonfarm jobs decreased by 4,800 from March. Private sector jobs, a subset of total nonfarm jobs, decreased by 5,000 from the previous month.

Over the year, Kansas lost 2,500 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs. Kansas lost 1,500 private sector jobs since April 2016.

“For the fifth consecutive month the unemployment rate in Kansas dropped and is now at 3.7 percent” said Kansas Secretary of Labor, Lana Gordon.

“Preliminary estimates from the payroll survey continue to indicate stagnant job growth in the state. Employers did however report scheduling more hours for existing employees compared to last April,” said Tyler Tenbrink, Senior Labor Economist, Kansas Department of Labor. “In the household survey, the unemployment rate fell one tenth of a percentage point due to a lower estimate of unemployed people and a small increase in the labor force.”

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