VICTORIA, Kan – The TMP_Marian girls finished first and the Hays High second in the 1-4A division of the Hays High Cross Country Invitational held at the Sand Plum nature trail in Victoria. The Monarchs girls beat Norton by eight points with Hays High finishing third. The Monarch boys came in fifth and Victoria seventh.
Dawson VonFeldt led the Indian boys with a second place finish. Justice Dotts was seventh. Christian Meuli of Victoria finished fifth and Jared Mayers from TMP-Marian was sixth.
Yesenia Maldonado led the High High girls with a fourth place finish. TMP’s Julia Werth and Emily Schippers finished sixth and seventh respectively.
HAYS, Kan.-Hays High battled hard but fell 4-1 to the defending 6A State Champions Thursday afternoon at the Hays High Field. Dodge City used the strong southerly wind and scored their first goal in the 6th minute to take the 1-0 lead. 19 minutes later the Red Demons took a 2-0 lead and finished off the first half scoring with a 31st minute goal to take a 3-0 lead.
Dodge would add a goal early in the second half to extend their advantage to 4-0. The Indians would score their only goal when Jacob Maska found the back of the net in the 59th minute. Hays High is one of only two teams this season to score against Dodge. Hays High is one of only two teams to play Dodge to within three goals with Bishop Carrol being the other losing to the Red Demons 3-0.
The loss drops Hays High to 4-3 on the year. The Indians next action will be at home on Tuesday against Great Bend.
LARNED, Kan. – The TMP-Marian girls’ golf team finished second at the Larned Invitational. The Monarchs shot a 425 and was 30 shots back of Hoisington. Shannen Chin won the individual title by 16 strokes, firing a 78. Jenna Romme finished 10th with a 112.
TEAM SCORES
Hoisington 395
TMP-Marian 425
Cimarron 429
Larned 486
SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for theft of a vehicle.
Just before 7p.m. Wednesday, police attempted to stop a suspected stolen vehicle near 10th and SE Golden Avenue in Topeka, according to a media release.
The driver, identified as Brandon King, 25, refused to stop and drove the vehicle south on Golden to 21st where the intersection comes to a T-intersection. He lost control of the vehicle. It jumped the curb, struck a power pole and slid into the ditch.
Thomas E. Roudebush, age 75, of Hays, passed away on Tuesday, September 12, 2017 in Hays. Thomas was born on August 12, 1942 in Greenfield, Indiana to Eldon and Jeanette (Jones) Roudebush. He married Maxine Joyce French on January 11, 1973 in Westminster, California. She preceded him in death on October 17, 2016 after 43 years of marriage.
He served his country with pride in the United States Army.
Thomas is survived by his three sons, Sam Hull and his wife Judy of Hays, John Santana and his wife Tammi of Missouri, Thomas Roudebush II and his wife Kris of Wichita; daughter, Terri Rice and her husband Larry of Sapulpa, OK; four brothers, Robert, Don, Chuck & Jim Roudebush; as well as numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his parents; beloved wife; and a daughter, Mary Rice.
Cremation has taken place. Private family services will be held at a later date. Arrangements are in care of Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel & Crematory, 2509 Vine St., Hays, KS 67601.
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors have dropped their case against a Kansas man accused of representing the bulk laundry detergent he was selling as Tide-brand detergent.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports that Brian Glenn had been scheduled to go on trial next week on a felony counterfeiting charge. But a deputy attorney general with the Kansas Attorney General’s Fraud and Litigation Division said in a motion dated Thursday that more testing is needed. The case was dismissed in a way that allows it to be refiled later.
Law enforcement agents and Proctor & Gamble representatives raided Glenn’s home last year.
Glenn’s attorney, Cooper Overstreet, said his client “made no representations that he was selling Tide soap.” Glenn told an agent that when he sold the soap, he described it as “Tide like” or “Tide type.”
Clean up underway at Slice near McCormick & Meridian in Wichita- photo courtesy KWCH
SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating an explosion at a business and asking for help to identify two suspects.
Just after 11:30 p.m. Wednesday, police were asked to assist the Wichita Fire Department in at Slice City Barber Shop in 2400 Block of West McCormick in Wichita according to officer Charley Davidson.
Investigator learned from witnesses that two suspects approached the business and then left the area. A short time later residents reported there was a loud explosion that caused damage to the business.
The Wichita Police Department Bomb Squad is also assisting with the investigation.
Both suspects are described as 30-40 years old, wore black cloth masks and blue jeans. One wore a flannel shirt with a light-colored hood.
Anyone who saw anything or who may have additional information is asked to call police.
WASHINGTON — This week’s drought monitor shows many areas of Kansas are experience severe to moderate drought again.
Much of the state is abnormally dry. There is a chance for rain on Saturday night for central and eastern Kansas, according to
the National Weather Service.
Celtic guitarist Jerry Barlow came to Hays on Saturday in hopes of changing some hearts.
Barlow, 67, of Golden Colorado began playing music when he was a teen and won a little money at church bingo, enough to buy a guitar. He played country music in his early days and had a song picked up by Conway Twitty.
He discovered Celtic music when he moved into the Smoky Mountains around Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
“So much of it has a primal quality, at least for me. It goes to the core of humanity,” he said. “A lot of it was born out of suffering, which gives it a lot of depth. I love the stories and all the histories and the legends behind that stuff as well.”
He did not know at that time if he had any Celtic blood. He later learned through genealogical research with the help of a friend he was part English and part Scottish on his father’s side.
“I would go to Irish jam sessions a lot and play. I would encounter a little attitude about my Englishness. It is strange though because the English are just as Celtic as the Irish and the Scots. It is built on a Celtic foundation, but the English were so cruel to the Irish and the Scots. It was hard to realize they were all Celtic, but they were. The way they subjugated the Irish and the Scots, it was just so brutal. It is hard to believe people who are brothers could do that to one another.”
Barlow worked on a project called Journeys, which highlighted how people immigrated to the United States over the last 150 years. The exhibit was going to museums and libraries, and Barlow performed at stops along the exhibit’s tour. He wrote songs for this tour that included “Voyage of Hope,” and “Crumbs for Crust,” which he performs with “Praties.”
Praties is an Irish word for potatoes and originates from the mid-1800s when the potato famine in Ireland drove hundreds of thousands of Irish to flee their home country for the United States.
Two-fifths of the Ireland’s population relied solely on the potato crop for their livelihood. The famine resulted in 1 million death and millions more emigrating from the country. Many Irish found hardship when they arrived in the States. White, protestants refused to employ the Irish immigrants, hanging signs in their windows that said, “Irish need not apply.”
Some Irish immigrants no sooner arrived in the U.S. when their were pressed into service to fight for the Union Army during the Civil War.
“The big thing, and I think this is why they came up with the Journeys project, is that immigration is such a hot-button topic,” he said. “You realize whoever comes over, the newest arrival, is going to be the lowest on the totem pole, and there is going to be bias and all that stuff. The Irish were just thought of as the scum of the earth. They were the lowest of the low for some time until they worked their way up. We tend to do that as human beings to the new arrivals until they make their way into American society.
“So much of what I saw visited upon them is what I see visited upon Hispanic and Middle Eastern populations now, but it is the same kind of stuff that the Irish were dealing with.”
Barlow encouraged the audience to join him in a round of “Waltzing Matilda,” whose tune is based on an old Celtic folk song. Barlow related the tale behind the song which is about a man wandering or “waltzing” around the Outback with his bag of possessions called Matilda. The man kills a stray sheep, and the wealthy landowner and mounted police pursue him. He jumps in the billabong or water hole and drowns himself rather than be captured. He haunts the billabong forever after.
Barlow admitted many of the Celtic folk songs are about oppression and tragedy and he tries to interject pieces that are a little more upbeat along with some of the classic ballads.
“My highest and best hope is that I will be able to give joy, healing, love and uplifting to an audience,” he said. “In a room full of 30 people, not everyone is going to have the experience. You hope for the people who are supposed to get it.”
Barlow plays acoustic versions of more modern songs from groups like the Beatles. Although bands like the Beatles and the Rolling Stones are not Celtic, Barlow said he can see some of the Celtic influences in their music. Drones on rock ‘n’ roll guitars are similar to the sound of bag pipes.
Barlow has performed in Hays before. During the concert at the library Saturday, a woman in the audience requested a song he had written, “Keepsake.” Barlow wrote the song after his parents died. At the time the woman first heard the song, she had just lost her teenage son. She told him she has been listening to that song over and over almost daily since his performance in 2010.
“She played it today before she came,” he said. “That is what I hope—that the music has some therapeutic value to people. I realize that won’t happen for everybody that walks through the door. It doesn’t happen that way for any performer, but you just trust that it reaches who it’s supposed to. I just happen to hit someone who was going through that. That song did what I wanted it to do.”
You can learn more about Barlow and his music, including purchasing CDs, by going to his website.
GEARY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a body found in Geary County on Thursday.
Just after 11:30a.m. deputies responded to report of a man’s body found underneath the K-18 bridge on the east side of U.S. 77.
Geary County Sheriff Tony Wolf confirms the man found deceased appears to be from a transient population, and was not from Junction City or a member of the military.
Authorities have not released his identity pending notification of next of kin.
Wolf stated, “Right now there is no evidence to suggest a homicide. We have scheduled an autopsy for the individual. We treat all of these as if they were worst case scenario, a homicide. But we don’t have any evidence right now to suggest that.
ABILENE – Tim Rives will discuss “Three Ways the Old West Influenced Dwight Eisenhower” during the next Miller Nichols Charitable Foundation Lunch and Learn program. A light lunch will be provided during the free program in the Visitors Center Auditorium at noon on Thursday, Sept. 21.
Rives is the deputy director and supervisory archivist at the Eisenhower Presidential Library. His research indicates Abilene’s cowtown history continued to influence Dwight Eisenhower years after he left his boyhood home. The experience shaped his taste in popular literature, gave him a code of honor, and formed his ideas on the role of government in American life.
Program attendees are also encouraged to visit the museum to see the “Chisholm Trail and the Cowtown that Raised a President” temporary exhibit. The exhibit was designed in-house to celebrate the Chisholm Trail 150th anniversary and will remain on display through spring 2018.
About the Eisenhower Presidential Library
The Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home, a nonpartisan federal institution, is part of the Presidential Libraries network operated by the National Archives and Records Administration. Presidential Libraries promote understanding of the presidency and the American experience. We preserve and provide access to historical materials, support research, and create interactive programs and exhibits that educate and inspire. Public programs and exhibits at the Eisenhower Presidential Library are made possible through the generous support of the Eisenhower Foundation. To learn more, please visit eisenhowerfoundation.net.
TOPEKA—Governor Sam Brownback issued the following statement Thursday after learning of the death of Nicodemus resident Gil Alexander, 60, whose inspirational story behind finding a kidney donation gained nationwide attention and was featured in the 2013 Brownback family Christmas card.
“Gil was a deeply respected member of the community, brilliant farmer, talented musician, and a good friend. His story touched thousands of lives, and he worked with passion to bring the importance of organ donation to the public conscience,” Governor Brownback said. “I’m happy I have the pleasure of knowing him and so saddened about his passing and the loss for the community of Nicodemus.”
Alexander farmed a large swath of land originally homesteaded by his great-grandfather Samuel Garland, who was born into slavery in Mississippi and later served as a Buffalo Solider stationed at Fort Leavenworth.
Alexander’s reputation was as a good neighbor, known for supplying sensible advice and serving as a pillar of the community. He was involved in developing the Kansas Black Farmer’s Association, and he served on the local library board. He also was a member of First Missionary Baptist Church in Nicodemus, playing piano and singing in the choir.
Rob Robinson and Gill Alexander, together in Nicodemus Dec. 8, 2012, after Robinson donated a kidney to Alexander on Nov. 26.
He gained nationwide attention in 2013 when media shared the story of his friendship with Rob Robinson, a Mississippi man who had knocked on Alexander’s door asking to hunt on his property. The two men formed a close relationship. Robinson found he was a perfect match to donate a kidney to Alexander, and ended up saving his life that way. Later, the two advocated on behalf of organ donation together, including through a 2014 visit with Governor Brownback at the Kansas statehouse.
See the 2013 Hays Post interview of Alexander and Robinson in Nicodemus in which Alexander said “Nobody but God could put us together like that.”
Alexander’s funeral will be 11 a.m. Saturday at First Missionary Baptist Church in Nicodemus. Memorial contributions can be made to First Missionary Baptist Church, Nicodemus.
JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) — A teenager says a high school teacher told her she was too “busty” and that “plus-sized women” need to shop at stores that sell larger clothing.
An attorney for Kelsey Anderson said in a statement released Tuesday that the confrontation happened last Friday when the 17-year-old was sent to the office at Joplin High School for a dress code violation. The statement says the teacher also told Kelsey that “smaller busted women could get away with more than larger busted women.”
Her attorney, Elizabeth Turner, said in the statement that “body shaming isn’t something to take lightly.”
The Joplin School District said in a statement that it doesn’t consider staff comments “about students’ bodies appropriate” and is investigating whether district policy was violated.