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Irma L. Herl

Irma L. Herl, 82, Hays, died Wednesday, October 4, 2017 at Hays Medical Center.
 
She was born September 21, 1935 on the family farm near St. Peter, Kansas the daughter of Herbert “Harry” and Loretta (Denning) Sanders. In 1952, she graduated from Quinter High School. On April 20, 1954 she was united in marriage to Leonard Herl in Collyer, Kansas. They celebrated 63 years of marriage. She was a farmwife and homemaker, a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, a member of the Altar Society at St. Theresa Parish in Dighton, Kansas, and taught fourth grade catechism class. Growing up on the farm she would milk her dairy cattle twice daily and had a favorite named Brownie. She loved animals and music and could play many instruments by ear.

Survivors include her husband; Leonard of Hays, a son; Terence Herl and wife Tamara of Fountain, CO, two daughters; Laurie Dimitry and husband Ed of Olathe and Valerie Fischer and husband Jul of Overland Park, three sisters; Celeste Herl and husband Moris of Hays, Elsie Loevenstein of Quinter, and Dinah Werth of Hays, one granddaughter; Kaeylarae Herl and two step grandchildren; Matt Shull and Andrea Shull.

She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister; Doloris Emerick, and a brother; James Sanders.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10:00 am on Saturday, October 7, 2017 at St. Joseph Catholic Church, 215 W. 13th, with Fr. Fred Gatschet officiating. Burial will follow in St. Joseph Cemetery.  Visitation will be from 5:00 pm until 8:00 on Friday and from 9:00 am until 9:45 on Saturday all at Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street.  A parish vigil service and rosary will be at 6:30 pm Friday at the funeral home. Memorials are suggested in Irma’s memory to the St. Joseph Church rectory fund, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com

Donna L. Attwood

SMITH CENTER – Donna L. Attwood, age 90, passed away on Thursday October 5, 2017 at Smith County Long Term Care in Smith Center.

Survivors are her daughter Annie (Ralph) Stepp of Smith Center; a son Ronald (Becky) Attwood of Smith Center; 5 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.

Arrangements are pending. Click HERE for service information.

Suspect driving on flat tires leads Kansas police on 2-hour chase

Gage -photo KDOC

ATCHISON COUNTY — A motorist driving on four flat tires led police on a two-hour pursuit in parts of Kansas and Missouri before his arrest.

The chase began early Thursday in northeast Kansas’ Atchison County when officers attempted to stop a pickup truck driven by 34-year-old Shane Gage on a warrant with several felony violations.

Police say Gage later drove into neighboring Missouri, through St. Joseph and toward Savannah. St. Joseph police laid a spike strip that blew out all four tires of the suspect’s vehicle.

Police say the pursuit ended in Savannah, Missouri, where the vehicle veered into a ditch. Officers found drugs and three loaded weapons in the vehicle.

Gage was taken to a hospital because officers believe he ingested several grams of methamphetamine prior to the arrest. Police say Gage will be jailed after his hospital evaluation. He has previous convictions for Aggravated Battery and Involuntary Manslaughter, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

The AP contributed to this report.

Ellis community food drive Sunday

(Click to enlarge)

ELLIS – The annual community food drive in Ellis, Trick Or Treat So Others Can Eat, will be held Sunday, Oct. 8 beginning at 4 p.m.

The Ellis Sunflowers 4-H Club has organized the collection.

Ellis residents are asked to set out canned foods and non-perishable food items on their front porch by 4 p.m. for students to collect.

All donations will go to the Ellis Food Pantry, now located at 210 Madison directly behind Casey’s General Store, and Ellis Food Boxes.

For more information call Leonard Schoenberger at (785) 726-1278.

– SUBMITTED

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 10/6/17

The Line-up

In heaven there were two lines. One said “Men who were bossed by their wives,” and the other one said,”Men who weren’t bossed by their wives”.

There was a big line for the first one, but then the man who was checking peoples name in the book of life saw one man in the other line. So he told the guys to wait. He asked the man why he was in that line.

The man replied,”My wife told me to.”

 

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🎥 5-minute meeting Thursday for Hays city commission

Jeff Boyle, director of Hays parks

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Thursday’s Hays city commission work session was a short one, just five minutes with one agenda item for review.

Jeff Boyle, director of parks, presented a bid for staining and sealing the wood structures at the Hays Aquatic Park. The low bid is $24,320 from Primary Painting and Remodeling of Russell.

This process was last completed in 2013 at a cost of $24,000. The recommendation will be taken up at the Oct. 12 regular city commission meeting.

Mayor Shaun Musil with Rachel Angel and Jennifer Hecker of Options

Prior to the work session, Mayor Shaun Musil signed two proclamations. The first was proclaiming October as about Domestic Violence Awareness Month in Hays with Jennifer Hecker, executive director of Options Domestic and Sexual Violence Services, and Rachel Angel, director of client services.

Musil makes an early donation to the Knights of Columbus Tootsie Roll Drive with Chairman Dave Dunn

The second proclamation was “Helping People with Intellectual Disabilities Days” Oct. 13-15 in Hays with Dave Dunn of the Knights of Columbus. The K of C in Hays will participate in the 47th annual statewide Tootsie Roll Drive next Friday through Sunday at various locations in Hays.

Commissioner Henry Schwaller and City Manager Toby Dougherty were absent from the meeting.

Tilford conference brings discussion on diversity to FHSU

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Fort Hays State University will host the 2017 Michael Tilford Conference, which will address diversity on Kansas college campuses.

The annual conference on diversity is open for any administrator, faculty or staff member and some grad students at Kansas Board Regents institutions. The conference rotates every other year to a Regents’ institution, and this is the first year FHSU will host the conference. FHSU will also host in 2018.

This year’s title for the conference is “Intentional Diversity: What is Your Part in Moving Kansas Forward?”

As many as 200 individuals will be in Hays Oct. 23 and 24 for the conference, which will be staged both on the main campus and at the Sternberg Museum of Natural History.

Michael Tilford was the Wichita State University representative on the Regents Diversity and Multiculturalism Committee from its onset in 1994 until his death. In the 1970s, he served on a committee that successfully developed a proposal for a minorities study program.

The featured speaker for the conference will be Bakari Sellers, CNN political analyst, lawyer and activist.

Sellers made history in 2006 when, at just 22 years old, he defeated a 26-year incumbent state representative to become the youngest member of the South Carolina state legislature and the youngest African-American elected official in the nation, according to the conference website.

He has championed policies on subjects ranging from education and poverty to preventing domestic violence and childhood obesity. Sellers practices law with the Strom Law Firm in Columbia, S.C., and is a political commentator at CNN.

The plenary speaker will be Teresa Clounch. She serves as the assistant vice president of student affairs for student life/Title IX coordinator at FHSU.

She provides leadership for the Student Life Cluster within the Division of Student Affairs, which includes the functional areas of inclusion and diversity, student union, bookstore, dining services, student involvement, performing arts series, fraternity/sorority life, residential life, new student orientation and transition programs, parent and family programs, student conduct, and Title IX.

Both days will also include a slate of workshops presented by FHSU and other Regents schools staff.

“I think it is important to see the college and western Kansas as a diverse culture,” FHSU Provost Jeff Briggs said of the importance of having the conference at FHSU.

The communities in this region that are growing are growing in diverse ways, he said.

Briggs said educating students to live and work in a diverse society is very important.

“Our students are going to go out and, in most instances, they are going to live in communities that are more diverse than they have come from,” he said. “Our mission is to educate students for a global society. Our graduates are expected to function with individuals from very diverse backgrounds and cultures, and I think our campus is continuing to make strides in that area.”

The demographics of all Regents institutions as of 2016 were 68.6 percent white; 6.6 percent Hispanic; 4.1 percent African American; 3 percent Asian; 0.7 percent Native American, Alaskan, Hawaiian; 11.9 percent international student; and 5.1 percent other.

The demographics of FHSU are 60 percent white; 7 percent Hispanic; 4 percent African American; 1 percent Asian; and 25 percent international students. The remaining 3 percent represent Native American, Alaskan, Hawaiian and other.

In 2016, African Americans made up 6.2 percent of the Kansas population, and Hispanics made up 11.6 percent of the Kansas population. Nationally, African Americans make up 13.3 percent of the population, and Hispanics make up 17.8 percent of the population.

Briggs said the school has seen growth in its Hispanic student population based on its service area. Many of these students are first-generation college students, who have some unique needs compared to their counterparts.

Regardless of race, first-generation college students might find it difficult to make the transition from home to school. Because of FHSU’s locations, some students might have a greater difficulty getting home because of the distance to their hometowns.

As attention is brought to race relations by nationally publicized protests, Briggs said campuses should be places where conversations happen about diversity.

“Those conversations are built on fact finding, valid information, open discourse about issues and that there is understanding of each side of the issue,” Briggs said. “That is part of the diversity conversation. It has to run the full gamut of what diversity means, which means understanding each side of the argument and making sure there is an appreciation for conflicting viewpoints.

“Part of the educational process takes into account all these points of information and is coming to an educated position you hold yourself as a citizen. Our role is not to tell you what to think, but it is that you do think about the positions you do take.”

Briggs has been back on the FHSU campus as part of the staff for 20 years, and said he thinks American society is making progress on diversity.

“I think we see more diversity in all walks of life,” he said. “I think we see these conversations on a more mature platform. They are more prevalent, mature and more engaging. Even though some recent activities raise cause for concern and make you wonder if we are making progress, I think we are making progress and there is more progress that can be made.”

Briggs said both domestic and international travel offered through FHSU has helped prepare students to function in a diverse society.

When asked about the state of race relations on the FHSU campus he said, “We will always continue to have challenges. I think as we provide students with more diverse experiences, there is greater appreciation for diversity, and that translates into their behaviors and society as a whole.”

This weekend’s Hays-area garage sales

Hays-area garage sales

Made possible by our sponsors: Coldwell Banker Executive Realty, Midwest Energy, Nex-Tech Wireless, Northwestern Printers and RE/MAX Pro.

Scroll to the bottom for a map of garage sale locations. Hays Post offers FREE garage sale listings weekly. Having a sale next weekend? Click HERE for details.

Address: 1000 West 38th Street, Hays
Items for sale: Multi-Household Sale
1000 W 38th
Fri 10/6 3pm to dark
Sat 10/7 9am to ???
Sun 10/8 afternoon – if needed???
So Many Items!!!!
– Books (Mostly hardback)
– DVDs, VHSs, CDs
– Silk Floral Arrangements
– Jewelry
– Craft Items
– Some Adult & Childrens Clothing
– Home Decor Items
– Lots of Picture Frames
– Lots of Household Miscellaneous & Knick-Knacks
TONS of Christmas items!!!!
– Mix of old and new
– Garlands
– Stuffed Animals
– Flower Arrangements
– Candles
– Cookie Jars
– Music Boxes
– Animatronic Characters
– Many Other Christmas Items
Larger/Higher Priced Items
– Dining Room Table & Chairs
– 4 Tires (Hankook 255 50 20)
– Miscellaneous chairs – 2 with foot rests
– Miscellaneous end tables
– Large Screen TV (Older model – Still Works)
– Microwave Cart
*** Lots of Items @ 2$, 1$ or less
*** Will keep adding items as we find them
*** Some higher priced items but . . . Reasonable offers will be considered!
*** If weather is bad on Fri 9/6 may adjust times and/or move to Sat/Sun
*** No Early Birds PLEASE!!! If you show up early we are putting you to work moving stuff and setting up!!!
Find us at 1000 West 38th in Hays. (Hall St to 36th or 39th. Then Fairway to 38th.)

Fri 10/6 3pm to dark Sat 10/7 9am to ??? Sun 10/8 afternoon – if needed???

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Address: 28 N. Kansas, Russell
Items for sale: Flea Market sale of various estate items such as: Antiques, collectibles, toys, household items, furniture, glassware, and much more. Location is the top floor of the old Catholic School in Russell on Hwy 40 and Kansas St.

Friday 2:00-6:00 Saturday 9:00-1:00

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Address: 2601 CATHEDRAL, Victoria
Items for sale: WE HAVE A FULLSIZE BEDROOM SET, REFRIGERATOR, CHEST OF DRAWERS, CHADELIER (GOLD IN COLOR), ARTWORK, OCTOBERFEST MUGS, BEER SIGNS AND MIRRORS, ALTO SAXOPHONE, STEREO EQUIPMENT AND SPEAKERS, MOTORCYCLE RAMP, WOMEN’S BLACK LEATHER JACKET AND BAG, LARGE 3 PERSON LAKE TUBE, ANTIQUE SLEDS, VERY LARGE (NICE) AREA RUG, HOUSE HOLD GOODS AND MANY, MANY OTHER ITEMS. WE ARE LOCATED AT 2608 CATHERAL , VICTORIA (ACROSS FROM 255 CONVENIENCE STORE) SOUTH OFF INTERSTATE EXIT 168

OCTOBER 7 8 AM TO 4 PM

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SUBMIT your free garage sale listing where it will be SEEN! Deadline is noon each Wednesday, but, hey, we’re flexible here at Hays Post. Click HERE to submit your weekend garage sale.

Cloudy, warm Friday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 3pm. Widespread dense fog before 9am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 79. South wind 7 to 13 mph.

Tonight Showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 11pm. Low around 49. Breezy, with a west wind 16 to 21 mph decreasing to 10 to 15 mph after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Saturday Sunny, with a high near 76. West northwest wind 9 to 11 mph.

Saturday Night Clear, with a low around 49. South southwest wind around 8 mph.

Sunday Sunny, with a high near 78. South southwest wind 6 to 13 mph.

Sunday NightA 20 percent chance of showers after 1am. Mostly clear, with a low around 51.

Columbus DayA 40 percent chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 59.

Bob Dole home from the hospital

WASHINGTON — Former Republican presidential candidate and U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole is home from the hospital. On September 13, doctors hospitalized the 94-year-old Dole at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center outside Washington, D.C. for low blood pressure

Dole’s wife, former North Carolina Sen. Elizabeth Dole, tweeted a request for prayers. He then tweeted that he hopes to be home in a few days, “sipping a cosmo.”

 

Dole served in Congress for 35 years. He left the Senate in 1996 for his campaign against President Bill Clinton. Congress recently voted to award him a Congressional Gold Medal.

Man who killed Kansas detective sentenced for carjacking

Ayers-photo Wyandotte County

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — The man who killed a Kansas City, Kansas, police detective last year was sentenced to more time in prison for crimes he committed in another county the same day.

The Kansas City Star reports 30-year-old Curtis Ayers was sentenced Thursday to 19 years and five months for carjacking and robbery.

Ayers is already serving a life sentence for the shooting death of Detective Brad Lancaster on May 19, 2016, near the Kansas Speedway.

After the shooting, Ayers fled and committed several other crimes, including entering a home in Basehor in Leavenworth County and stealing a man’s car at gunpoint.

He was arrested later that day in Kansas City, Missouri, after a police officer shot Ayers while he was trying another carjacking.

Unsealed documents: Kobach wanted Trump to change federal voting law

Trump met on Nov. 20. with Kobach at Trump’s New Jersey golf course. photo courtesy Fox

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas official who is vice chairman of President Donald Trump’s commission on election fraud drafted a proposal for Trump to change federal voter registration laws.

A federal court document unsealed Thursday shows the proposal was part of a strategic homeland security plan prepared by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

Kobach was photographed taking the document into a meeting with Trump in November when Trump was president-elect. The portion dealing with federal voter registration laws was not fully visible.

U.S. District Judge Julie Robinson also unsealed a second document prepared by Kobach and shared inside his office. It contained the text of the proposed changes to federal law.

Kobach was forced to turn over the documents as part of a voting-rights lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Hays High rally falls short at Liberal


By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post

Liberal 6, Hays High 5

LIBERAL, Kan.-Hays High fell behind 3-0 after the first half and trailed 4-0 early in the second half and then turned a switch. The Indians would get three goals in a three minute and 24 second surge, started by a header from Trey McCrae, to pull within one goal in the 48th minute of the second half. Liberal would counter and push the lead to 5-3 when their shot found the back of the net.

The Indians refused to go away as Zach Wagner scored on a penalty kick to get the Indians back to within one goal. Ethan Nunnery would score the equalizer in the 72nd minute, his third goal of the game. Liberal would get the last word as the Redskins scored the game winner (79th minute) with a goal that found the left side of the net which gave Liberal the lead for good. Wagner had a final shot attempt that sailed just wide left.

Hays High drops to 9-5 on the season with their second straight loss. The Indians are off until next Saturday when they host Bishop Carroll.

SILAS HIBBS INTERVIEW

 

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