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Kan. basketball legend returns to bench while undergoing cancer treatment

Stiles-photo courtesy Mo. State

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) – Scoring legend Jackie Stiles is returning to the bench as an assistant for Missouri State while awaiting cancer surgery.

The Springfield News-Leader reports that Stiles, a native of Claflin, Kansas, will be back on the sidelines Friday after a nearly three-week absence. She is undergoing treatment for ocular melanoma and will undergo surgery Feb. 2. Stiles says her prognosis “remains very good” and expressed thanks for “all the support so far.” A news release announcing her cancer said it was caught early.

Stiles was the all-time leading scorer in NCAA Division I women’s basketball history until Kelsey Plum broke her record last season. Stiles led Missouri State to the NCAA Final Four in 2001.

Stiles says she plans on waiting to share her experience until she returns to full-time coaching.

Taylor Wayne Ratliff

Goodland, KS resident Taylor Wayne Ratliff, 16, passed away on Wednesday, January 24, 2018 at his home in Goodland.

Taylor was born on February 22, 2001 in Smith Center, KS to Kelly Dean and Thea Dawn Ratliff. At the time of his death, Taylor was attending school at Goodland High School and was in the 11th grade. He enjoyed sports and had a special love for his dog Emma. Some of his favorite hobbies included hunting, shooting and spending time with friends.

Preceding Taylor in death were his two grandfathers Dean Leroy Ratliff and Andrew David Russell. He was also preceded in death by an uncle Zachary Dougherty.

He is survived his parents Thea and Kelly Ratliff of Goodland, KS; two brothers Cordell and Tristen Ratliff of Goodland, KS; his grandparents Annette Lewis of Goodland, KS, Mary (Roger) Ledoux of Phillipsburg, KS; Karl (Deb) Dougherty of Joplin, MO; aunts Lacie (Mark) Sieck of Goodland, KS, Beth Freeman of Phillipsburg, KS and Tina (Jim) Larison of Alma, NE; uncles Kent (Evon) Ratliff of St. Louis, MO, Levi (Becky) Dougherty of Phillipsburg, KS, Bob (Annie) Russell of Phillipsburg, KS, and Jacob (Jessie) Dougherty of Phillipsburg, KS; his girlfriend Delanie Vrbka, as well as numerous other aunts, uncles, cousins and friends.

Funeral services for Taylor will be held on Monday, January 29, 2018 at 10:30 AM MT at the United Methodist Church in Goodland, KS with Pastor Brent Flanders officiating. Cremation will follow the service.

Visitation will be held on Sunday, January 28, 2018 from 5:00 to 7:00 PM MT at the Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland.

Memorials are designated to the Taylor w. Ratliff Memorial Fund and may be left at the services or mailed to Koons-Russell Funeral Home, 211 N. Main Ave., Goodland, KS 67735.

Online condolences may be left at www.koonsrussellfuneralhome.com.

Funeral services are entrusted to Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland, KS.

Kansas man dies after crash through fence, over creek

BROWN COUNTY — A Kansas man died in an accident just before 12:30p.m. Friday in Brown County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol a 2002 Mitsubishi Eclipse driven by Ernest Benjamin Reynolds III, 40, Morrill, was westbound on 280th Road one mile east of Hamlin at a high rate of speed,

The driver lost control of the vehicle. It left the roadway to the south, traveled through a barbed wire fence and a telephone pole, went airborne over a creek bed and came to rest in a pasture south of the roadway.

Reynolds was pronounced dead at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Author of ‘The Last Cattle Drive’ to speak at historical society annual meeting

Ellis County Historical Society

Please join the Ellis County Historical Society at 7 p.m. Monday at 100 W. Seventh St., Hays for its annual meeting and a presentation by Robert Day, author of “The Last Cattle Drive.”

Day’s presentation of “The Life and Times of a Kansas Author” will begin at 7:30 p.m. and is open to the public.

Copies of the 30th anniversary printing of “The Last Cattle Drive,” will be available for purchase at the meeting.

Robert Day’s novel “The Last Cattle Drive” was a Book-of-the-Month Club selection. His short fiction has won a number of awards and citations, including two Seaton Prizes, a Pen Faulkner/NEA prize, and Best American Short Story and Pushcart citations.

His fiction has been published by Tri-Quarterly, Black Warrior Review, Kansas Quarterly, North Dakota Quarterly, Summerset Review, and The Four Wheel Drive Quartet, as well as three collections of short fiction: “Speaking French in Kansas,” “Where I Am Now,” and “The Billion Dollar Dream.”

His nonfiction has been published in the Washington Post Magazine, Smithsonian Magazine, Forbes FYI, Modern Maturity, World Literature Today, American Scholar, and Numero Cinq. As a member of the Prairie Writers Circle, his essays have been reprinted in numerous newspapers and journals nationwide, and on such Internet sites as Counterpunch, and Arts and Letters Daily.

Recent book publications include “We Should Have Come By Water” (poems), “The Committee to Save the World” (literary non-fiction), and “Chance Encounters of a Literary Kind” (memoir), “Let Us Imagine Lost Love” (a novel), and “Robert Day for President: an Embellished Campaign Autobiography.”

Among his awards and fellowships are a National Endowment to the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship, Yaddo and McDowell Fellowships, a Maryland Arts Council Award, and the Edgar Wolfe Award for distinguished fiction. His teaching positions include The Iowa Writers Workshop; The University of Kansas; and the Graduate Faculty at Montaigne College, The University of Bordeaux.

He is past acting president of the Associated Writing Programs; the founder and former Director of the Rose O’Neill Literary House; and founder and publisher of the Literary House Press at Washington College, Chestertown, Maryland.

Born in Shawnee in eastern Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City, in 1941, Day grew up there before it was all one big suburb. He finished his B.A. and M.A. degrees at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, then went on to teach at Fort Hays University.

He took a Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of Arkansas and began working in the English Department at Washington College, where he was currently writer in residence. He returns to Kansas for the summers, living in Ludell, a small town in Rawlins County. Kansas remains the setting of much of his fiction.

Biography source: http://www.washburn.edu/reference/cks/mapping/day/index.html

Power temporarily out in Russell after semi accident, grass fire

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

RUSSELL – Power was temporarily out to the southern portion of the city of Russell after a semi hit a power pole Thursday night.

The semi driver did not see the pole and struck it the area behind Subway near the Interstate 70 interchange. The accident occurred about 6:45 p.m. Thursday.

Arcing power lines started a small grass fire, which the firefighters quickly extinguished, said Shane Preston, Russell fire chief.

Power was out to mostly commercial customers in the area for about 45 minutes.

No one was injured in the incident and no structures were damaged.

Former Trego County rural fire chief charged with stealing from county

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

WAKEENEY – A former Trego County rural fire chief has been charged with stealing from the county.

In court papers filed Jan. 10 in Trego County Court, Larry James Eberle was charged with filing a false voucher for $539 in December 2015.

Eberle has been charged with making false information, which is a felony, and theft by deception, which is a misdemeanor.

He retired from the fire service in January 2017.

According to a story that appeared in the Western Kansas World, Eberle was a member of the fire service for 30 years, joining Trego Rural Fire in 1986.

Eberle was chosen as the 2014 Fire Chief of the Year at the Kansas State Fire Chiefs’ Association meeting.

Hays falls Shawnee Mission Northwest in McPherson

Following an opening round loss to Wichita Northwest on Thursday afternoon, the Hays High Lady Indians returned to action less than 24 hours later in McPherson.  Friday’s consolation semi-final game was a state ranked showdown.  The Lady Indians entered the game at #6 in 4A-1.  Their opponent, Shawnee Mission Northwest, ranked #8 in 6A had already played seven other state ranked opponents in 11 games.

Hays hit a pair of shots on their first two possessions of the ball game to take a 5-2 lead.  The Lady Indians pushed that lead up to five at 10-5 with 2:34 left in the first quarter.  The Indians though made just one of their next thirteen shots in the remainder of the first half.  That allowed Northwest to go on a 12-2 run and take a 17-12 lead.  Jaycee Dale made a pair of free throws with a minute left in the half to cut the halftime deficit to 17-14.

Highlights

The Lady Indians turned those two points from the first half into a 14-2 run, building a seven point lead at 26-19.  The lead came at the 3:20 mark of third quarter.  Hays though would score just three points over the next 9:55.  The Lady Cougars embarked on a 15-3 run to build a 34-29 lead.  Savannah Schneider converted a three point play with ninety seconds left to cut the Hays deficit down to two.  The Lady Indians got good looks at the basket on their next three possessions but could not score.  Northwest hit a pair of free throws with ten seconds left to ice the game and a 36-32 win.

Coach Kirk Maska

Hays falls to 8-4 on the season on their third straight loss.  Shawnee Mission Northwest improves to 7-5.  Hays will play for seventh place at 2:00 on Saturday.

Dolores “Dee” Hutchison

Dolores “Dee”Hutchison

Dolores “Dee” Hutchison was born December 2, 1932 in Joliet, Illinois, to Albert and Esther Wuchte and passed away in Austin, Texas on January 21, 2018, surrounded by her loving family.

On June 5, 1954, she married the love of her life, Ron Hutchison. Ron became an Air Force fighter pilot, thus beginning their travels around the world. Dee was a homemaker and mother of four children. They moved from Texas to France, England, Arizona, Nebraska, Spain and finally Barksdale Air Force Base, Bossier City, Louisiana, arriving in 1971. After retirement from the Air Force in 1975, they made Bossier City their home. After her children were raised, and starting families of their own, Dee joined the work force, following Ron into the real estate business as a receptionist/secretary. She remained in that line of work until her battle with cancer began in November, 2015. She was not ready to retire. Dee loved her work family at Diamond Realty. She did not give into cancer, and over the past two years was able to witness the birth of three more great grandchildren, the wedding of her oldest granddaughter, and had many more travels.

Dee is preceded into heaven by her husband, Ron; her grandson, Trey; and 3 of her 12 siblings.

Dee is survived by her children: Mark (Wendy) of Bossier City, Gary (Tracie) of Mansfield, TX, Rhonda (Sherry) of Lake Claiborne, LA, and Matt (Kelly) of Hays, KS. Her grandchildren: Luke (Britney), Wendy, Chase, Chelsy (Charlie), Chandler, Chad, Hayden, Mattie, Palmer, Aaron, and Shea. Her great grandchildren: Brody, Jake, Hannah, Kaden, Amari and Harper. We are especially grateful for Shirley Gersh, her devoted sister, companion, and caregiver.

Memorial Services for Dee Hutchison will be held at First Baptist Bossier, Faith Chapel, Bossier City, LA, on Saturday, January 27, 2018 at 3:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, please make donations in her memory to St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital or the Shreveport/Bossier Rescue Mission.

Board gives full support after criticism of Kan. education official

Dale Dennis- photo Kansas Dept. of Education

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on the State of Board of Education’s response to criticism of a high-ranking Kansas education official (all times local):

3:40 p.m.

The State Board of Education has expressed its full support for a top Kansas schools official under fire from some lawmakers.

The board voted 9-1 Friday to advise Education Commissioner Randy Watson of its full support for Deputy Commissioner Dale Dennis.

Watson would have the final decision on whether to discipline Dennis over questions about how some school funding dollars were allocated.

The board met after House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr. and Senate President Susan Wagle sought to have Dennis and his staff suspended. Their request was a response to an audit last month that questioned how some transportation dollars were being allocated.

1:55 p.m.

The State Board of Education is having a private meeting with a top Kansas education official under fire from top Republican legislators.

The board held its session Friday with Deputy Education Commissioner Dale Dennis after having a closed session to discuss legal issues related to the allocation of transportation funds.

The board convened after House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr. and Senate President Susan Wagle sought the suspension of Dennis and members of his staff.

An audit last month questioned the legality of how some transportation funds have been distributed for years. The top Republican lawmakers said they want a thorough audit of school funding.

The audit said state law did not authorize the calculation in distributing transportation dollars. Dennis has said lawmakers knew of the practice for decades.

___

1:25 p.m.

Dozens of local school superintendents and Kansas lawmakers have packed the State Board of Education’s meeting room to show their support for a high-ranking education official.

The board had a closed session Friday to discuss legal issues and planned to have another one to discuss personnel matters.

It met after House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr. and Senate President Susan Wagle sought the suspension of longtime Deputy Education Commissioner Dale Dennis and members of his staff.

The Republican lawmakers’ request followed an audit questioning the legality of how some transportation funds have been distributed for years. They said they want a thorough audit of school funding.

But dozens of other lawmakers signed a letter supporting Dennis and four former governors sent their own calling for a vote of confidence in him.

___

12:30 p.m.

Four former Kansas governors are urging the State Board of Education to give a vote of confidence to a high-ranking education official under fire from legislators.

The four ex-governors sent a letter Friday supporting Deputy Education Commissioner Dale Dennis ahead of a special board meeting. Former Republican Govs. Mike Hayden and Bill Graves and ex-Democratic Govs. John Carlin and Kathleen Sebelius signed it.

The board scheduled its meeting after House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr. and Senate President Susan Wagle asked to have Dennis and members of his staff suspended. The Republican lawmakers’ request followed an audit questioning the legality of how some transportation funds have been distributed for years.

The four governors said the data provided by Dennis throughout his decades-long career has been of the highest quality.

Former Kan. Trooper admits using excessive force during arrest

KANSAS CITY —Former Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper James Carson pleaded guilty in federal court to violating an individual’s civil rights by using excessive force, according to Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division John Gore.

According to documents filed in connection with the plea, on June 25, 2013, the Defendant, James Carson, was acting under color of law as a Trooper for the Kansas Highway Patrol when he used unreasonable force against an arrestee, R.T.

According to the documents, Carson conducted a lawful arrest and then transported R.T. to the Labette County Jail, where at least five other law enforcement officials were present. As Carson removed R.T. from the patrol vehicle and escorted him into the booking area, R.T.’s hands were cuffed behind his back. Without warning, Carson kicked the legs out from underneath R.T., causing R.T. to crash down on his back onto the floor. Carson admitted in court that he used force against R.T. for the purpose of punishment and not for a legitimate law enforcement purpose.

As part of the plea agreement, Carson has agreed to surrender his law enforcement credentials and never again accept any employment related to law enforcement.

“Any law enforcement official who uses excessive and unreasonable force against an arrestee violates the Constitution and its provision to provide for the safety and security of all citizens,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General John Gore of the Civil Rights Division. “The Justice Department will continue to aggressively prosecute officer misconduct and protect the integrity of our civil rights laws.”

This case was investigated by the Topeka Resident Agency of the Kansas City Field Office of the FBI. The case was initially investigated by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Maag of the United States Attorney’s Office and Trial Attorney Rose Gibson of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section.

Police ask for assistance to locate missing Kansas man

Click to enlarge

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement officials are asking the public for help to locate a missing Kansas man.

On Friday, December 15, the family of 25-year-old reported Alex Michael LaRussa contacted the Salina Police Department that he was missing.

LaRussa was last seen just before 9:30p.m. Friday, December 8 in the area of Iron and Ohio Streets in Salina.  He was driving a tan 2004 Ford Explorer with Kansas tags at the time of his disappearance.  LaRussa is described as white male, approximately 6-foot-2 and weighs about 175 pounds.

He has black hair and brown eyes. His left leg was amputated above the knee and he is wheel-chair bound.

If you have any information concerning the disappearance of Alex LaRussa, call Crimestoppers at 825-TIPS, text SATIPS to CRIMES (274637), or visit www.pd.salina.org and follow Crimestoppers link to submit a web tip. You may receive a cash reward of up to $1,000 and you are not required to give your name.

UPDATE: Mom whose 4 kids were killed in Kan. fire in critical condition

Photo courtesy GoFundMe

PRATT, Kan. (AP) — A hospital official says a mother whose four children were killed in a southern Kansas house fire is in critical condition.

Cheree Eggleston suffered burns and was flown Thursday morning from the town of Pratt to St. Francis Hospital in Wichita. Her children, the youngest a baby, died after being trapped in the home’s basement. Besides the mother, three other adults in the home survived.

Pratt police Detective Jeff Ward says the cause of the fire is unknown. A state fire marshal is on scene investigating.

Pratt is about 80 miles (128.74 kilometers) west of Wichita.

——–

PRATT COUNTY — Officials remain on the scene of a deadly Thursday morning house fire near the intersection of 2nd and Austin in Pratt, according to the city law enforcement center.

Four children died in the fire, according to Pratt police Detective Jeff Ward.

The children’s mother, Charee Eggleston, was transported to a Wichita hospital for treatment of severe burns.

The children, ranging in age from 4 months to 4 years, were trapped in the basement of the home.

Friends of the family have established an online fundraiser to assist the family.

 

Couple plead not guilty to Kan. charges unrelated to woman’s murder

Boswell-photo Taney County
Trail has previous convictions for theft and writing worthless checks in Kansas.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A couple considered people of interest in the slaying of a Nebraska woman have pleaded not guilty to charges in an unrelated gold coin scheme.

Aubrey Trail entered his pleas Thursday in a U.S. District Court videoconference. He’s being held in a Leavenworth, Kansas, prison. Bailey Boswell entered her pleas Monday in Lincoln.

Investigators say Trail used a false name in November 2015 when he persuaded a Kansas couple to enter a joint venture to purchase a gold coin, with the understanding they would later sell the coin and split the profits.

Prosecutors say the coin wasn’t worth what Trail had said and that Trail and Boswell used false documents and websites for the ruse.

Sydney Loofe-photo courtesy photo

Authorities say the two are people of interest in the death of a 24-year-old Lincoln woman, Sidney Loofe. They were arrested Nov. 30 near Branson, Missouri

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