We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Police release pictures of Kansas armed-robbery suspect

Suspect from the attempted-robbery in 800 block of South Meridian

SEDGWICK COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities are investigating a series of weekend attempted-robberies or armed robberies and asking for help to identify suspects.

On Sunday officers responded to an attempted armed robbery at the Valero gas station in the 800 block of South Meridian in Wichita, according to a social media release. Police released pictures of the suspect.

Just before 1a.m. Saturday, officers were dispatched to an armed robbery to the Quik Trip in the 1600 block of east Lincoln in Wichita. The employee reports an unknown suspect entering the business and demanding money. The suspect indicated he had a gun. The suspect took cash and left the business.

Suspect from the robbery in the 1600 Block of Lincoln

If you have any information call Wichita police or Crime Stoppers.

FHSU men’s soccer shuts out Marauders in final regular season road match

BISMARCK, N.D. – The Fort Hays State men’s soccer team defeated the University of Mary 2-0 on Sunday afternoon (Oct. 22). The victory moves the Tigers to 8-5-2 on the season, while Mary falls to 6-6-1 on the year. The loss ended Mary’s three-match win streak.

The Tigers came out aggressive in the first half as they outshot the Marauders eight to two, but neither team could find the back of the net as they went into halftime scoreless.

Abdoulaye Cisse got the ball rolling in the second half as he scored his seventh goal of the season from 10 yards out in the 56th minute on a loose ball following a corner kick. The Tigers kept the 1-0 advantage until the 67th minute as Caesar Jones connected on a rebound that ricocheted between players in front of the net.

The score held up as the Tigers rebounded from a seven-match win streak snapped last Sunday. Alex Rodela earned the victory in goal for the Tigers as he improved his record to 2-1 on year.

Fort Hays State outshot Mary 18-5 on the afternoon. The Tigers were able to produce offensive opportunities with 11 corner kicks in the match.

The Tigers will play their final three regular season matches at home. The run begins with Upper Iowa on Thursday (Oct. 26), starting at 5 pm.

Chargers send Broncos to 1st shutout loss in 25 years

CARSON, Calif. (AP) – Travis Benjamin returned a first-quarter punt 65 yards for a touchdown and caught a 42-yard TD pass in the fourth, and the Los Angeles Chargers played a dominant defensive game in the first home victory of their relocation season, 21-0 over the Denver Broncos on Sunday.

Joey Bosa had two of the Chargers’ five sacks while they sent the Broncos (3-3) to the franchise’s first shutout defeat since a 24-0 loss to the Los Angeles Raiders on Nov. 22, 1992.

Philip Rivers passed for 183 yards in his 100th victory, hitting Austin Ekeler for an early TD and Benjamin for the late clincher.

The Chargers (3-4) have won three straight under new coach Anthony Lynn following a winless opening month in their first season back in Los Angeles after 56 years in San Diego.

Trevor Siemian passed for 207 yards, but Denver lost to the Chargers for just the third time in the AFC West rivals’ past 14 meetings – and did so in historic fashion.

The Broncos, who have never been shut out at home, might have been able to preserve their non-shutout streak with long field goals in the fourth quarter. But coach Vance Joseph went for it twice on fourth down and ended up with an interception and a turnover on downs.

The Chargers had lost seven consecutive home games since last November, and they hadn’t won a home game as the LA Chargers since Dec. 18, 1960.

But the Bolts largely dominated the Broncos, who have lost three of four with a flagging offense that has managed three touchdowns in four games. Los Angeles also avenged its season-opening loss in Denver on a blocked field goal at the end.

The Chargers forced a turnover on Denver’s opening drive and advanced to the Broncos 1, but failed to punch it in on four straight running plays. Undeterred, the Los Angeles defense got a stop – and Benjamin allowed one big bounce before scampering down the middle for the Chargers’ first punt return for a TD since 2012.

That was only the Chargers’ second touchdown of the season in a first quarter, where they had been outscored 50-7.

Neither offense accomplished much in the first half, but Ekeler caught a 1-yard swing pass from Rivers for a TD in the second quarter, capping a 65-yard drive and staking Los Angeles to 14-0 halftime lead.

That was the Chargers’ biggest lead in their past 14 games, but they missed plenty of opportunities to make it bigger. Along with that game-opening failure at the 1, Jahleel Addae and Jatavis Brown both dropped easily catchable interceptions on passes from Siemian, who was under constant pressure from the Chargers’ pass-rushing duo, Melvin Ingram and Bosa.

Benjamin got open across the middle late in the fourth quarter and took off for his second touchdown catch with the Chargers.

BRONCOS HISTORY

Von Miller finished with two sacks, moving past Karl Mecklenburg for second place in franchise history behind Simon Fletcher. Miller has sacked Rivers 16 times.

INJURIES

Denver’s offensive struggles were likely related to the injury absences of right tackle Menelik Watson (calf) and receivers Emmanuel Sanders (ankle), Isaiah McKenzie (ankle) and Cody Latimer (knee).

The Chargers played without starting right tackle Joe Barksdale (turf toe) and key defensive lineman Corey Liuget (back). They lost LG Matt Slauson to a biceps injury in the second half.

UP NEXT

Broncos: At Chiefs on Monday night in a prime-time chance to answer back in the AFC West race.

Chargers: At Patriots on Sunday for the first of two straight transcontinental road trips, with their bye week sandwiched in between.

Chickadee Checkoff program accepting small grants proposals

KDWPT

PRATT – For 37 years, wildlife and wildlife enthusiasts have benefited from the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism’s (KDWPT) Chickadee Checkoff program through small grants. By making small grants available each year, KDWPT is able utilize the talents and expertise of people outside of the department to complete a wide variety of educational, research-based, and habitat projects, as well as the monitoring of nongame wildlife and critical habitats.

KDWPT is currently accepting proposals for the Chickadee Checkoff Small Grants Program through December 1, 2017.

Interested parties can obtain more information, including eligibility requirements and a list of priority projects for 2018, by downloading the grant guidance document at ksoutdoors.com/Services/Wildlife-Diversity/Chickadee-Checkoff/Chickadee-Checkoff-Small-Grants-Program.

KHI: Potential health effects of municipal water reuse in Kansas

KHI

TOPEKA – In 2013, Kansas Governor Sam Brownback called on the Kansas Water Office and the Kansas Department of Agriculture to develop a long-term vision for water in Kansas. The resulting Kansas Water Vision provides a set of strategies related to conservation, water management, technological advancements in irrigation and plant varieties, and the development of new sources of water supply. By calling for an evaluation of the sources and potential uses of lower-quality water as a strategy for additional sources of water supply, the Water Vision provides an impetus for examining opportunities for water reuse in Kansas.

To inform the Kansas Water Vision and future decisions about water reuse, the Kansas Health Institute conducted a health impact assessment to examine how municipal water reuse might positively or negatively impact the health of Kansas residents.

This study analyzed seven factors related to the effects of water reuse which could impact health in Kansas, including water availability, community sustainability, water quality, community perception of water quality, consumption of beverages other than municipal water, costs and utility rates, and guidance and regulations. To maximize the potential positive health effects and mitigate the potential negative health effects of water reuse, the assessment includes recommendations for policymakers and relevant agencies to consider.

READ IT HERE:

Executive Summary: Potential Health Effects of Municipal Water Reuse in Kansas
Full Report: Potential Health Effects of Municipal Water Reuse in Kansas

The Kansas Health Institute delivers credible information and research enabling policy leaders to make informed health policy decisions that enhance their effectiveness as champions for a healthier Kansas. The Kansas Health Institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan health policy and research organization based in Topeka, established in 1995 with a multiyear grant from the Kansas Health Foundation.

UPDATE: Kansas man dies in rollover crash

FORD COUNTY — A Kansas man died in an accident just before 12:30 a.m. Sunday in Ford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Mazda 3 driven by Robert Cintron-Vazquez, 21 Dodge City, was westbound in the outside lane on U400 just east of U.S. 56 at a high rate of speed.

The vehicle passed a vehicle and got back into the outside lane. The driver overcorrected. The vehicle left the roadway to the right, entered the north ditch, struck a culvert and rolled multiple times.

Cintron-Vazquez was transported to the hospital in Dodge City where he died. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

——–

FORD COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatality accident that occurred just before 12:30 a.m. Sunday in Ford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a vehicle was westbound in the outside lane on U400 just east of U.S. 56 at a high rate of speed.

The vehicle passed a vehicle and got back into the outside lane. The driver overcorrected. The vehicle left the roadway to the right, entered the north ditch, struck a culvert and rolled multiple times.

The KHP did release additional details early Sunday.

FHSU women’s soccer goes 0-2 on Oklahoma road trip; fall to Bronchos

EDMOND, Okla. – In their second road match of the weekend in Oklahoma, the Tigers fell to Central Oklahoma 4-1 as the Bronchos pushed past the Tigers in an offensive-forward match. With the loss, the Tigers are now on a two-match losing skid and now drop to 8-5-3 overall with a 5-3-1 mark in MIAA play. The Bronchos are now 7-7-2 overall with a conference record of 4-3-2.

Central Oklahoma was the first to get on the board as Katie Killion broke away from the crowd to slip the ball past the Tiger goalkeeper for her first goal of the season. Later on in the first half, the Tigers could not contain Morgan Cherry as she captured her fifth goal of the season ten yards outside the box. Fort Hays State headed into the locker room trailing 2-0 to Central Oklahoma.

Twelve minutes into the second half, Asha Haile found an assist from Kelsie Eason for her eighth goal of the season and to put Central Oklahoma up 3-0 over the Tigers. The final goal of the afternoon from Central Oklahoma came after Eason hit a loose ball 20 yards out to put up the Bronchos 4-0 with just over 20 minutes left in the match.

The Tigers would not be shutout, however, as freshman Olympia Katsouridis netted her first career goal for Fort Hays State after an assist from Kylie Thomas. Katsouridis headed the ball off the cross to earn the Tigers’ only goal of the match.

In the contest, the Bronchos out-shot the Tigers 17-7 and 12-4 on target.

The Tigers are back home this Friday (Oct. 27) as they host Nebraska-Kearney for their final regular-season MIAA home match. Sunday will be the final regular-season match for Fort Hays State as they travel to Washurn.

Countries reject plans for expansion of aviation biofuels

By ANURADHA MITTAL
Oakland Institute

OAKLAND, CA – On October 13, 25 countries convened by the UN International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) rejected the 2050 Vision on Sustainable Aviation Fuels that included volume-based targets for biofuels proposed by the ICAO Secretariat.

The ICAO Secretariat’s proposal intended to see 128 million tons of biofuels a year being burned in plane engines by 2040, going up to 285 million tons (half of all aviation fuel) by 2050. By comparison, some 82 million tons of biofuels are currently used every year in transport worldwide. The proposal would have led to an unprecedented expansion in biofuel production, more than likely in poorer countries. It would have accelerated the expansion of industrial palm oil which is major driver of land grabbing across the tropics, threatening the lives and livelihoods of millions in the developing world.

“ICAO Member States took the right decision by rejecting the 2050 ICAO Vision on Sustainable Aviation Fuels proposed by the ICAO Secretariat, which was based on poor analysis, and grossly overestimated environmental benefits and potential emissions reductions,” said Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute. “Our research warns that given the mind-boggling land requirements needed to meet the industry’s CO2 target, aviation biofuel has a price tag that neither people nor the planet should have to pay,” Mittal continued.

Airlines are caught between economic constraints and environmental problems with fossil fuels and CO2 emissions. Airlines would like to see biofuels as the answer to both challenges, but such expansion would lead to hundreds of millions of hectares of land to be either deforested or shifted from food to biofuel production.

“We firmly oppose the promotion of biofuels for aviation,” said Jeff Conant, International Forests Campaigner at Friends of the Earth, U.S.. “The climate and human rights impacts of industrial demand for palm oil are already grave. Instead of driving greater demand, Governments must take urgent measures to reduce the climate impact of aviation by stemming and ultimately reversing its growth,” he continued.. “This will require ending subsidies – including tax exemptions – for aviation, ending airport expansion, and investing in alternatives, including rail transport.”

Kansas man with 26 convictions sentenced to more time in prison

Gulick -photo KDOC

RENO COUNTY — A Kansas man serving time on numerous convictions was ordered to serve an additional 21 months on top of the seven years he’s already serving.

Matthew Gulick, 31, was convicted of criminal possession of a firearm and misdemeanor possession of marijuana for a case from Nov. 22, 2016. He reportedly had a Glock 9 mm handgun at the time of his arrest.

His attorney asked for a departure even though he has a criminal history score of “A” — which is given to those with an extensive history of criminal activity. According to the Kansas Department of Corrections website, he has 26 felony convictions for which he’s serving time. That includes numerous burglaries, thefts, distribution of drugs, and even aggravated intimidation of a witness.

District Judge Trish Rose denied the motion and, under Kansas law, the 1-year, 11-month sentence handed down Friday will run consecutively to the seven years he’s serving now.

Science Cafe: Conquer your stress & negativity through mindfulness

(Click to enlarge)

FHSU University Relations

Science Café presents: “Mind Control: A How to Guide for Conquering Stress and Negativity through Mindfulness”

If there was something you could do to promote your well-being and productivity in the time it took you to drink your morning coffee, would you do it?

This presentation will center on mindfulness-based stress reduction. We will discuss why mindfulness is important and how the practice can be incorporated into everyday routines. Focus will be given to training in guided mindfulness as well as exploring obstacles that hinder achieving this state.

Tue., November 7, 2017 7:00 PM
Gella’s Diner, 117 East 11th Street, Hays , KS 67601

Presenters: Dr. Whitney Jeter, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, FHSU
Mrs. Brooke Mann, Lecturer, Department of Psychology, FHSU

Free and open to the public

Sponsored by FHSU Science and Mathematics Education Institute. For more information call 785-628-4743.

🎥 ROTHS: City commission candidate

Dustin Roths, Hays city commission candidate

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

There are five people running for the three open positions on the Hays city commission in the Nov. 7 general election.

The candidates are Chris Dinkel, incumbent Sandy Jacobs, John Mayers, incumbent and current mayor Shaun Musil, and Dustin Roths.

The two people with the highest number of votes will be elected to four-year terms. The person with the third highest vote total will serve a two-year term. The mayor is selected by the commission members.

Hays Post has talked to each candidate, asking why they are running and what they consider to be the most important issues facing the city of Hays.

Political newcomer Dustin Roths, 32, is a “conservative Republican.” He and his wife Laney have a six-month old son, Nolan. He is the owner of Diamond R Jewelry, now in its third location as the business has grown the past six years.

Roths likes to jokingly refer to himself as “The Skinny Jeweler on Main Street.” He’s not joking when he talks about his desire to draw on his retail and entrepreneurial experience if elected to the city commission.

“The biggest concern of the community is the downturn in the oil and agricultural commodities markets the past few years,” Roths believes. “We need to diversity our economy and continuing to build our retail sector. Hopefully, I can use my experience and perspective as a retailer To draw more retail businesses, and what can be done to lower tax burdens on companies.”

He’s always been interested in politics, particularly at the national level. Roths is running his campaign for local office on “conservatism, growth and liberty. I hope to be elected by people who want those kinds of things.” Whether elected or not, Roths hopes to get “a lot of people to show up at the polls.”

“I think conservatism just lends itself toward growth,” Roths said. “If you can be fiscally conservative as a government, such as you see with the economies in Texas, Florida and Utah growing above and beyond the states around them, it’s mainly because it attracts business.”

“It’s always been my contention people spend their money better than government ever would. As long as we can keep as much as possible in the pockets of people in Hays, the better our economy will do.”

With his libertarian philosophy, Roths believes in “leaving people alone to do what they want to do with their own stuff is the best way to go. I definitely would like to get rid of some regulations in city zoning and things of that nature. Maybe some of that regulation is keeping people and businesses away from Hays.

“That growth and prosperity (portion of my campaign slogan) is important for all of us, in our homes and businesses.”

In his interview, Roths also talks traffic roundabouts on north Vine Street and the possibility of diverting more traffic to the other two Interstate 70 exits, the R9 Ranch water supply project, the city budget, and why he wanted to become a “part of this great community.”

More information about Roths and his campaign is on available on his website: https://www.dustinroths.com/

Advance voting begins Mon., Oct. 23 in the Ellis County Administrative Center, 718 Main, Hays, through noon Mon., Nov. 6. Polls for the Tue., Nov. 7 general election are open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. throughout Ellis County.

Family’s world tour to study parenting lands them in Hays

By CRISTINA JANNEY

Hays Post

Nine months ago Dan Kois and his family left their life in a Washington, D.C., suburb to tour the world and experiment with different ways of being a family.

For the next three months, Dan, his wife, Alia Smith, and two daughters, Lyra and Harper, will live in a quiet neighborhood in Hays learning about family life in the Midwest.

Kois, an editor for the online magazine, Slate, and a contributor to New York Times magazine, and his family were feeling the pressure of suburban life and wondering if there were different parenting styles that could bring the family closer together.

“Living there was feeling a little off to us,” Kois said of Virginia. “We thought surely there were other ways we could be living our lives that would make us feel more connected to our kids, make us feel like we were raising the kids we would like to raise and having the kind of family life we would like to have, so we decided that we would try an experiment.

“The experiment was to travel around the world for a year and live in four different places and learn the most we could about how family life worked in each of those places,” he said.

The family selected New Zealand, the Netherlands, Costa Rica and Hays as places they would live for three months each to explore different types of family life.

Each of the locations was selected, because it represented a lifestyle and locale that was different from what the family was used to and frankly Kois said parenting styles that the Kois’ were just bad at.

Kois thought a look at family life would not be complete without a closer look at American family life. Kois grew up in Milwaukee, and although that life in a Midwest city is different from life in Hays, it also was very different from what his children were experiencing in Virginia.

“It seemed crazy to think about and write about different ways of being a parent and not think about the different ways there are to be an American parent — that our way of doing things on the east coast is not the only way to be a family in America,” he said. “So to explore a place that we could give ourselves a totally different life right here in America seemed really appealing and interesting.”

The Koises chose Hays because they are friends with playwright and Hays resident Catherine Trieschmann, who Dan knew from college.

The Koises were concerned about being able to break into the social world of a small town, and thought having someone here they knew might ease that transition. Dan said thus far that fear has been overblown.

“It just seems to be an entire town of people who seems to be devoted to being nice to us all of the time,” he said of Hays.

Harper, 10, who is in fifth-grade at O’Loughlin Elementary School and Lyra, who is in seventh grade at Hays Middle School, had mixed feelings about the adventure. They were excited about traveling and the prospect of getting their own YouTube channel to document their trip, but angry they had to leave home and friends behind.

“Those two emotions of being excited about the adventure and being annoyed about how difficult it could be — they have teetered on both of those emotions on the trip,” he said. “So there have been times it seems to me they have loved the places we have been and delighted in meeting new people and experiencing new things, and there definitely times we have just said, ‘God why can’t we just be back were we know how everything works and where all our friends are and things feel easy and not hard.'”

The family started their trip in New Zealand, where a family of non-outdoorsmen, enjoyed hiking and camping in the country’s spectacular national parks. They landed in a neighborhood with lots of children and families in a country that has been known to be very welcoming to newcomers.

“People were totally happy to meet strange, new people from the United States and immediately go out for a beer with them and ask them questions about Donald Trump,” he said.

Kois said parents in New Zealand do not keep track of their children every minute of the day. They are allowed to roam the neighborhoods freely.

“It reminded me of my childhood,” he said. “Letting my children roam without consequences, I really found refreshing.”

The Kois spent their next three months in Delft, Netherlands, which is north of Rotterdam.

Parents in the Netherlands use the polder method of parenting. Without the dam system in the Netherlands, the country would be underwater. The control of the water is a great matter of concern and negotiation. That spirit of negotiation carries over to the family dynamic. Children are encouraged to participate in family decisions and negotiate with and question their parents.

Kois said this type of parenting was a point with which he and his wife struggled.

“I found that I liked being an autocrat. I liked being in charge,” he said.

Like in New Zealand, the safe and secure environment in Delft allowed the Koises to give their daughters more independence and freedom. Transportation in the Netherlands is primary via bicycle. The girls’ new mobility led to more independence.

Kois said the family’s whole lives revolved around this new mode of transport. The family made more grocery trips, because they bought only what they could carry in a bicycle basket. Family outings were a bike trip to one of the local parks.

“It narrowed our world, but we were able to explore that world at our own pace,” he said.

Although the vast majority of people in the Netherlands also speak English, Intimate relationships and friendships are in Dutch, which Kois said made it very difficult for his family to break into social network of the community.

With the Koises move to Costa Rico, another language barrier arose. None of Koises were fluent in Spanish. The Koises were there over summer break, but the girls spent time in language classes.

Living in Costa Rica was not only a study of the traditional Costa Rica family structure, but also the structure of American ex-pats living in Costa Rica.

The life of the Koises peers in Costa Rico were revolved around the ocean.

“You swam in the ocean. You smelled the ocean. The weather was dictated by the ocean. Family activities were centered around the ocean,” he said.

Life in Costa Rico is very relaxed, and residents there have a deep appreciation of the environment and the natural world, which is embodied in the phrase Pura Vida.

Many Americans settle in Costa Rica because of its tropical setting, inexpensive cost of living and safe communities.

However, the country does not necessarily have all of the amenities the Koises were used to in Virginia. The electricity and the Internet access was often spotty. The water was not always drinkable and the mosquitoes were oppressive.

The children also witnessed a different standard of living and poverty among for some of Costa Rico’s citizens.

The Koises have only been Hays two weeks. Kois said he is reserving a judgment about Hays and its parenting style until he spends more time in the city.

“This feels more like home,” he said. “We know this will end in a few months and it is not as foreign as our time in Costa Rica.”

Lyra described the typical struggles of middle school life, but said she loved the Hays Public Library.

Harper excitedly talked about a recent trip to the Sternberg Museum of Natural History and getting to see its famed fish within a fish.

Kois’ book, “How to be a Family,” is set to be released in fall 2019. However, Kois said he hopes his family has gained something more than a book out of their year-long adventure.

“When our kids are adults and they are asked what their childhoods were like,” he said, “I feel quite certain this is the first thing they will say. I hope this has created an origin story for them.”

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File