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Annual meeting of DHDC set for Jan. 17

DHDC

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Members/Partners of the Downtown Hays Development Corporation (DHDC) will be held on Wednesday, January 17, 2018, at Gutch’s Bar and Grill, located at 2111 West 7th Street, Hays, County of Ellis, State of Kansas, 11:00 – 11:30 a.m., to take action on the following matters:

1. The report of officers.
2. 2017 Year in Review.
3. All other business which shall come before the meeting.

The 2018 Board of Directors: Joslyn Brungardt, Sarah Cearley, Alaina Cunningham, Karen Dreiling, David Herl, Kim Hodny, Mike Holliday, Sandy Jacobs, Elodie Jones, Sandy Keller, Justin McClung, Dax McLoughlin, and Dustin Roths.

The regularly scheduled January Board of Directors meeting will immediately follow the conclusion of the Annual Meeting.
RSVP is required. Please RSVP to Sara Bloom at [email protected] or 785-621-4171.

Phillips County Review dominates Kansas Press Association awards

Phillips County Review
PHILLIPSBURG — “It is my pleasure to inform you of your newspaper’s KPA 2018 Awards of Excellence results,” began the recent email to the Phillips County Review from Emily Bradbury, the incoming Executive Director of the Kansas Press Association.

Following that introduction, Bradbury’s communication then proceeded to list winners of the KPA’s annual Awards of Excellence contest that pits Kansas’s 240 or so newspapers against one another in a variety of categories, with the top publications recognized as being the best in their fields at what they do.

With the Phillips County Review participating  in the contest as a weekly with a circulation of 1500 and under, the majority of those 240 newspapers in the state consist of local publications similar in size and circulation to the Phillips County Review.  Surmounting the obstacle of a large number of competitors, in 2016 the Phillips County Review won KPA awards in five categories for reporting, photography and advertising.

Following up on that, in 2017 the Review won in nine categories for reporting, photography, advertising, editorial pages and column writing.

And now with the release of the 2018 judging results the Phillips County Review has eclipsed those previous numbers by taking in a total of 21 different awards.

The wins this year were so encompassing that the Review nearly swept three different reporting categories, winning two out of three awards possible in them.

With those 21 different awards the Review again took honors, as it has in previous years, in categories of news reporting, investigative reporting, photography, advertising, editorial pages, and column writing.  This year it also repeated in those same categories and added new wins in categories of editorial writing, sports writing, sports page layout, news and writing excellence, and design and layout excellence.

This year’s awards, which includes material appearing in the newspaper between Jan. 1, 2017 and Oct. 31, 2017, includes:

Best Editorial Writing
This is a first time category win for the Phillips County Review.  Judging for it is based on local impact, reasoning, writing excellence and leadership shown through the editorials.

The highest honors possible in the state of Kansas for newspapers in this category was won by Kirby Ross of the Review.  Three different original editorials written by Ross were reviewed by KPA judges in order to assure there was an ongoing consistency in the high quality of writing required to win this award.

Best Spot News 
Photography
This is a brand new category for the Kansas Press Association this year.  A spot news photo is one taken at an unplanned event, such as a car crash, fire, explosion, etc. Judging is based on timeliness, impact and technical quality.

Kirby Ross won first place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category for his photograph encaptioned “DESTRUCTION” that was taken at the site of the Husky Hogs fire near Long Island last June.

This photo was originally presented across all six columns of the newspaper, and depicted Husky Hogs owner Terry Nelson running a track loader clearing debris caused by the catastrophic fire to his facility that killed over 9,000 hogs.

While winning first place for his photograph relating to this story, Ross also won third place for the news report that went along with it (see below).  At the time of the fire this photograph, as well as a version of Ross’ related article, also ran on the Hays Post website.
Photo by Kirby Ross

Best General News 
Photography
In this category judging is based on hard news photography for an event that’s planned ahead of time, such as court hearings, trials, news conferences, and city council meetings.  Judging is based on timeliness, impact and technical quality.

Kirby Ross won first place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category for his photograph encaptioned “Wowza!” that was taken of Phillipsburg Elementary School third graders wearing protective glasses while watching last August’s solar eclipse.
Photo by Kirby Ross

Best News 
Reporting (x2)
In this category judging is based on community importance of event, timeliness, thoroughness of reporting and writing style.

Kirby Ross was determined to have written the second best and third best news stories in their newspaper categories for the state of Kansas in 2017.

The second place win for Ross for news reporting was for his story entitled “Inmates Riot at Norton.”  At over 100 column inches long, the story included a comprehensive overview on the origins of the rioting, how the rioting unfolded and progressed, the riot’s aftermath, how the rioting involved Phillips County, how law enforcement across the state reacted to it, how elected and other public officials officials reacted to it, and how the national media reported on it.

The third place win for Ross for news reporting was for his story entitled “Dangerous Fire Sweeps Through Hog Complex.” A photograph taken by Ross that ran with this story won first place for Best Spot News Photograph (see above).

Ross’ news report on this fire began by laying out the importance of Husky Hogs to the economy of Phillips County, then proceeded to provide an overview of the site of the fire and how it started, the number of fire departments that responded to it, descriptions of the multiple buildings that were affected, the dollar value of the damage, the number of hogs killed, and how the difficult blaze ended up having to be fought.

Best Investigative 
Reporting (x2)
For the second year in a row the Phillips County Review won Kansas Press Association accolades for investigative reporting.  Last year the Review won one award for investigative reporting; this year it won two awards for two different unrelated stories.

In this category, judging is based on writing style, community importance of event, impact, enterprise and thoroughness of reporting.

Kirby Ross of the Review won second place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category for his work relating to a press release issued by Phillips County Hospital last February that the hospital is still being defended to this day.

The hospital had earlier purchased multi-million dollar computer software without undergoing a competitive bidding process, resulting in considerable critical blowback in the community.  Months later the hospital issued a press release that asserted it had revisited the purchase of the software and had recently conducted a competitive bidding process.  Without naming the parties to the bids, the press release claimed four bids had been received, that one of the bids had been accepted, and that the terms of the purchase of the software had been rolled up into a “new contract.”

By state law, bidding processes by government agencies are subject to public disclosure.  Pursuant to state law (the Kansas Open Records Act), the Phillips County Review began looking into the claims asserted in the press release.  When the Review asked for the bid specs and and copies of the four bids the hospital claimed it had received, the Review hit a brick wall.

In the resulting award-winning article, the Review reported the hospital initially outright refused to provide the specs and the four bids, with the hospital claiming, in writing, that the types of bids they received weren’t the type of bids that had to be released to the public.

Phillips County Hospital CEO Rex Walk of Frisco, Texas, subsequently told the Review that no bids were received.  Walk had difficulty reconciling that position with the position taken in the press release, but did say the press release should not have been sent out.  The issue of the bids remains unresolved.

Also reported in this same award-winning article, the Review further looked into the second part of the hospital press release that spoke of a “new contract” relating to the multi-million dollar software.  When the Review made a written request for a copy of the new contract, the hospital responded in writing by saying there was no new contract.  In the face of the hospital’s own press release and two more written requests from the Review, the hospital finally said that there was a new contract, but that it was an old contract.
Kirby Ross also won a second 2018 KPA investigative reporting award, this one for third place honors, for his reporting on local and regional gas price jumps related to Hurricane Harvey.
This story tracked a 17 percent local increase in gasoline pricing in Phillipsburg that took place in five jumps over the course of three days, and compared those increases with increases in seven other north-central Kansas communities, including Hays, as well as the state of Kansas and the nation as a whole.

Best Government and 
Political Reporting (x2)
This is a third category that the Phillips County Review nearly swept, winning two out of the top three spots in the state for newspapers the Review was in competition with.
In this category judging is based on local impact, writing style, originality and enterprise.
Kirby Ross won second place honors for reporting done in a story entitled “Public Voices Concern re: New Controlled Burn Rules.”
This story reported on a controversial decision by Phillips County Commissioners to change controlled burn procedures in the county.  The measure passed by a vote of 2 to 1, but was never actually implemented due to a major grassroots backlash.  After a county commissioner’s meeting was attended by very vocal opponents, the controlled burn procedure changes were subsequently rescinded.
Kirby Ross also took third place honors for Kansas newspapers in this same Government and Political Reporting category for an article he ran entitled “County’s Legislators Split Medicaid Vote.”
This story related to efforts in the Kansas Legislature to expand Medicaid, and how two of Phillips County’s legislators — Bowers and Billinger — voted for it, and one — Rahjes — voted against it.
The story detailed how the legislation was strongly supported by the Kansas Hospital Association and the National Rural Health Association, which stated the law was crucial to helping rural hospitals survive.
The reporting told of how the bill passed both houses of the legislature, but was vetoed by the governor. Supporters of the bill then were unable to override the veto.
The Phillips County Review’s award-winning story encompassed over 60 column inches, and included graphics on the voting and quotes from Phillips County’s legislators and other Kansas lawmakers.
The story outlined the Kansas Hospital Association’s position that Kansas had lost $1.7 billion to date by failing to expand Medicare, and that passing the bill would have brought $58 million in medical-related funding into the 36th and 40th Senate Districts, both of which encompass Phillips County (the 36th covers the eastern two-thirds of Phillips County; the 40th covers the western one-third).

Best Health 
Reporting
In addition to winning in the Government/Political reporting category, the above-referenced story entitled “County’s Legislators Split Medicaid Vote” also won Kirby Ross a third place KPA award for Health reporting.
Judging in this Health reporting category is based on writing style, community importance, originality and enterprise.

Best Series 
Reporting
As already noted, the other above-referenced Government and Political award article — “Public Voices Concern re: New Controlled Burn Rule” — won a writing award as a single stand-alone story.  That single story was also part of a broader series of reports that included three other related controlled burn rule change stories that ran over the course of six weeks that reported the entire process from start to finish.
This string of articles won Kirby Ross a third place award for series reporting.
In this Best Series Reporting category judging is based on writing style, reader interest, enterprise and thoroughness of reporting.

Best Column 
Writing
In this category judging is based on writing style, originality and reader interest.  Three different columns from throughout 2017 were reviewed by KPA judges in order to assure there was an ongoing consistency in the high quality of writing required to win this award.
For the second year in a row, the highest honors in the state of Kansas in this category was won by columnist Karen Madorin.  Madorin, formerly of Ellis and Logan, also writes for the Hays Post.

Best Editorial Pages
The Review is a repeat winner for Kansas newspapers in this category, having won second place in 2017 and now again in 2018.
Judging is based on editorial content, leadership, community interest, impact and layout and design.
This award is independent of the Editorial Writing award also won by the Review (see above).  The Editorial Writing award was for the quality of specific individual editorials written by a Review staff member; the Editorial Pages award is for the quality of everything that appears on the editorial page, as well as the editorial page design.

Sports Feature Story
Judging for this award is based on general interest, writing style and originality.

Review
sportswriter David Steinle won second place honors in this category for a story entitled “Panther Gridders Ready To Roar in ‘17” which ran just prior to this year’s Phillipsburg Panthers winning football season.
The article provided an overview of this year’s football team, along with its strengths and overall prospects for the season that was about to begin.
The Panthers were in the midst of its post-season playoff run at the time judging for this category was taking place, and the story had aged extremely well.

Best Sports Pages
Judging in this category is based on layout, use of photos and graphics, and variety of articles.
The Phillips County Review won second place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category for the work done primarily by Cheri Parks, Jacque Bretton and David Steinle.
Best Political Ad
Judging is based on an advertisement for a candidate, ballot issue, political party or other political advertiser.
Kirby Ross and Cheri Parks shared first place Kansas Press Association honors for a political campaign ad built for a mayoral candidate in the recent election.

Best Online 
Promotion
Judging is based on a newspaper’s online promotion.
The Review won first place for its advertisement promoting the online edition of the Phillips County Review. The ad is headed by the phrase “Your local Newspaper The ORIGINAL Hand-held Information Device.”
Best House Ad
Judging is based on the best single ad or series of ads promoting subscriptions, advertising or a specific aspect/department of the newspaper.
The Phillips County Review won second place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category for an ad touting the fact the Review has been around for over 95 years. “We are here today. We will be here tomorrow,” it notes.  The same ad also lays out the array of Kansas Press Association Awards of Excellence the Review won last year.

Best Headline 
Writing
Judging in this category is based on originality and effectiveness of headlines, appropriateness for story subject and layout of headlines.
The Phillips County Review won third place honors for Kansas newspapers in this category.
Design and Layout Excellence
This is an overall evaluation of the newspaper’s design and layout.  Judging is based on layout and design of every page, use of white space, font selections and use of photos and graphics.
Cheri Parks receives primary credit for the third place honors the Phillips County Review won in this category.

News and Writing 
Excellence
This is an overall evaluation of the newspaper’s news and writing ability.  Judging is based on writing styles, originality, headlines and general interest.
The Review took third place in this category.  Credit for this award goes to the variety of local writers who contribute to the content of the Phillips County Review.

State Fire Marshal identifies victim in rural Kansas fire

Location of the Dec. 26th fire google map

TOPEKA – Wade Stewart Parkhurst, 35, of Wamego, was the fatality victim located within the residence of an early morning, Dec. 26, fire in Pottawatomie County, according to a media release form the state Fire Marshal’s office.

This information is still pending official identification from the medical examiner’s office.

The Kansas Office of the State Fire Marshal’s (OSMF) Investigation Division joined the St. George Fire Department in the investigation of the fire.

The fire occurred in the early morning hours at 3769 Stewart Farm Road, Wamego, KS.

Five investigators from OSFM responded to assist with this investigation where one person was initially unaccounted for, after five people in the residence had been able to evacuate.

The body of Parkhurst was located within the residence. The cause of death was listed as toxic gases due to the fire at the residence.

The origin of the fire was in the basement of the residence. The cause of the fire is still classified as undetermined, but more likely than not, is accidental associated with a failure or malfunction of several electric components within the area of origin.

Foul play is not suspected. It was a total loss to the property at this residence. Investigators estimated over $350,000 in damages.

Kansas man dies after pickup hits bridge, rolls

PHILLIPS COUNTY — One person died in an accident just before 10:30p.m. Tuesday in Phillips County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Dodge Ram 1500 driven by Robert D. Speth, 49, Logan, was westbound on Kansas 9 highway four miles east of Logan.

The driver slammed on the brakes. The pickup hit the bridge, entered the north ditch and rolled.

Speth was transported to Phillip’s County Hospital where he died. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Sunny, cold Wednesday

Today Sunny, with a high near 33. Wind chill values as low as 4. North northwest wind 7 to 14 mph.

Tonight Mostly cloudy, with a low around 12. Wind chill values as low as 4. North northeast wind around 6 mph becoming south southeast after midnight.

ThursdayPartly sunny, then gradually becoming sunny, with a high near 40. Wind chill values as low as 4. Southeast wind 5 to 8 mph becoming south southwest in the afternoon.

Thursday NightMostly clear, with a low around 16. South wind around 6 mph becoming northwest after midnight.

FridaySunny, with a high near 42. Calm wind becoming east southeast around 6 mph in the afternoon.

Friday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 17.

SaturdayMostly sunny, with a high near 47.

No. 18 Texas Tech never trails in win over No. 10 KU

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kennan Allen scored 15 points, Norense Odiase and Justin Gray had 12 apiece, and No. 18 Texas Tech never trailed in beating No. 10 Kansas 85-73 on Tuesday night for the Red Raiders’ first win at Allen Fieldhouse in 18 tries.

The Red Raiders (13-1, 2-0 Big 12) built a 16-point lead midway through the first half, then found an answer every time the 3-point-dependent Jayhawks (11-3, 1-1) tried to mount a second-half charge.

Zach Smith had 11 points and Jarrett Culver contributed 10 for Texas Tech, which has won its first two Big 12 games for the first time in a decade. The Red Raiders also snapped a four-game skid in league road openers by winning their seventh straight game in the toughest of venues.

Devonte Graham led the Jayhawks with 27 points, but a lot of that came at the foul line, where he was 13 of 13. The senior guard struggled from the field, just like the rest of his team — they were 6 of 26 from beyond the arc and missed all 12 of their 3-point attempts in the second half.

Svi Mykhailiuk had 11 points for Kansas before fouling out. Udoka Azubuike also scored 11.

The loss snapped the Jayhawks’ 16-game win streak against Texas Tech, and gave coach Bill Self’s team two losses in the Phog in the same season for the first time since 2006-07.

Everything went Texas Tech’s way in the first half — every loose ball, rebound and extra possession — and coach Chris Beard’s team began to grow in confidence with each passing minute.

Two sequences in particular summed up the first 20 minutes.

The first came when the Red Raiders scored a bucket inside, stole Mykhailiuk’s inbounds pass and buried a 3-pointer for a five-point jolt that silenced the sellout crowd in a matter of seconds. The second came when Zhaire Smith scored with 13 seconds left before the break, and the Jayhawks flubbed the inbounds, forcing them to rush a shot at the other end before the buzzer sounded.

Self was so steamed by that play that he was poised to slam his fist into the scorer’s table. He thought better of it and took his angst to the locker room instead.

Even though Evans was struggling with his shot, the Red Raiders kept answering Kansas, even when Self reluctantly turned to a zone. They merely dumped it inside to Odiase and Tommy Hamilton IV for easy baskets that kept their advantage in double digits much of the second half.

The Jayhawks trimmed the lead to 67-61 with about 5 minutes left, but Malik Newman missed an ill-advised 3-pointer and Azubuike turned the ball over to squander a chance to get closer.

The teams began trading free throws down the stretch, and even though Graham was perfect from the stripe, the Red Raiders were good enough to keep the Jayhawks at arm’s length.

BIG PICTURE

Texas Tech has staked a claim through two games for Big 12 superiority. The Red Raiders routed then-No. 18 Baylor 77-53 in their conference opener last Friday, giving them a pair of wins over teams that were expected to contend for the title this season.

Kansas fell in love with the 3-pointer again with ugly results. The Jayhawks are among the best in the nation when their shot is falling, but their lack of interior depth gives them little to fall back on when the jumpers start bouncing off the iron.

UP NEXT

Texas Tech faces Kansas State on Saturday.

Kansas visits No. 16 TCU on Saturday night.

1 hospitalized after car travels off I-70, down embankment

GOVE COUNTY —One person was injured in an accident just after 7:30p.m. Tuesday in Gove County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Honda Civic driven by Brayden Anthony Farrar, 22, Westminster, CO., was westbound on Interstate 70 three miles east of Quinter.

The driver lost control of the vehicle exiting the roadway to the right.

The Honda traveled down a steep embankment and rolled through a fence and landed on the driver’s side door.

Farrar was transported to Gove County Medical Center. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Brownback to deliver Kan. budget, school finance plan, not Colyer

Colyer and Brownback

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback says he’ll deliver budget and school funding proposals next week and won’t resign before he’s confirmed by the U.S. Senate to an ambassador’s post.

Brownback said during an Associated Press interview Tuesday that he’ll give the annual State of the State address Jan. 9.

He also said the budget and school funding proposals will be his, though Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer had more input than usual.

President Donald Trump nominated Brownback in July for U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom. The Senate didn’t vote on his nomination by the end of the year, but Brownback said he expects his appointment to be resubmitted.

Colyer’s influence on budget matters and his appointment of a Cabinet secretary in November prompted questions about whether Brownback had ceded some power.

Man accused of attack on Kansas deputies after chase

Robinson-photo Lyon County

EMPORIA, Kan. (AP) – A 35-year-old man who allegedly led Kansas officers on a chase with his 5-year-old daughter in the car is accused of attacking three sheriff’s deputies.

Robert Robison III, of Ferguson, Missouri, was arrested Friday in Greenwood County. Sheriff Heath Samuels says officers weren’t aware the child was in the car when the chase began after they determined Robison’s car was sought in a hit-and-run in Missouri. The chase ended when the car crashed south of Severy. The girl was not injured.

The Emporia Gazette reports while Robison was being held Friday night in the Lyon County jail, he allegedly attacked three detention officers in his cell. They weren’t seriously injured.

Robison is facing eight charges in Greenwood County. The Lyon County Attorney’s Office will determine if charges will be filed in that case.

Attorney: Family of Kan. ‘swatting’ victim wants officer charged

Police body camera images of The December 26, fatal incident courtesy Wichita Police

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The family of a Kansas man fatally shot at the door of his home after a hoax emergency call wants the police officer who killed him criminally charged for his death, their attorney said Tuesday.

Police have said 28-year-old Andrew Finch was shot after a prankster called 911 last Thursday with a fake story about a shooting and kidnapping at Finch’s Wichita home. They said the hoax call was a case of “swatting,” in which a person makes up a false report to get a SWAT team to descend on an address.

Finch’s mother, Lisa Finch, wrote a letter Tuesday to Mayor Jeff Longwell, police Chief Gordon Ramsay and other city officials saying an unannounced visit from the police chief three days after the shooting did not ease her heart and left questions unanswered.

“It goes without saying that our family is devastated by what has happened,” she wrote. “What cannot go without saying is why Wichita City leadership is compounding our grief and sorrow, by keeping my son from us? Please let me see my son’s lifeless body. I want to hold him and say goodbye. Please immediately return his body to us.”

Her letter also posed numerous questions, including asking when officials will return the front door, a computer, two cellphones, a video game and other items that were seized from the family’s home. The family also wants information on the protocol and training for officers as it relates to “swatting” calls.

Chicago civil rights attorney Andrew M. Stroth, who is representing the family, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Tuesday that what the “swatters” did was inappropriate and tragic. However, he said, the family wants Wichita and its police to be held accountable.

“Justice for the Finch family constitutes criminal charges against the shooting officer and any other liable officers as well as damages against the city of Wichita for the policies and practices of its Police Department,” Stroth said.

But criminologist B. Remy Cross at Webster University in Missouri said criminal charges are highly unlikely.

“It is sort of a fact of the world we live in now that it is very difficult to bring charges against police officers unless there is glaring negligence and misconduct,” Cross said. “While I certainly sympathize with the family — and I think there was probably not the necessary due caution exercised in this incident — I don’t know that they are going to necessarily be very successful in pushing for charges to be brought against the officer.”

Police spokesman Charley Davidson said the department has not received Lisa Finch’s letter and cannot comment on it. He said police have provided all the information they can at this point, and that the investigation remains active.

Police played the 911 call at a news conference last week. The man making the call said his father had been shot in the head. He said he was holding his mother and a sibling at gunpoint. Several officers arrived and surrounded the home, braced for a hostage situation.

Andrew Finch went to the door and SWAT officers told him to put his hands up and move slowly. Deputy Chief Troy Livingston told reporters last week that Finch moved a hand toward the area of his waistband. Livingston said an officer who feared Finch was reaching for a gun fired a single shot.

Finch was unarmed.

Dexerto, an online news service focused on gaming, reported that the series of events began with an online argument over a $1 or $2 wager in a “Call of Duty” game on UMG Gaming, which operates online tournaments including one involving “Call of Duty.”

Barriss- photo courtesy Glendale, Calif. police

Police have confirmed that 25-year-old Tyler Barriss is suspected of making the call and was arrested in California, but haven’t offered additional details. He’s in custody in Los Angeles.

Kansas is pursuing extradition of Barriss, a process that can take up to 90 days, according to Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett in a statement emailed Tuesday. Under Kansas law, defendants are provided notice of charges they face at their first court appearance, and the nature of any charge is not public until then.

“A determination of additional charges will be made by prosecutors with this office after a review of the information gathered,” Bennett said.

Barriss could appear in a California court as soon as Wednesday for an extradition hearing.

Kansas State’s Bill Snyder returning for 27th season

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas State coach Bill Snyder will be back on the sideline next season.

The 78-year-old coach told his assistants during a short meeting Tuesday that he will return for his 27th season with the Wildcats, a person familiar with his decision told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because Snyder has not announced his plans.

Snyder said after a Cactus Bowl victory over UCLA last week that he was still mulling whether to return next season or retire for a second team. He stepped away briefly after the 2005 season.

Snyder was diagnosed with throat cancer last offseason, but hardly missed a practice and headed into the year with high expectations. A series of early losses scuttled Big 12 title hopes, and it took a run at the end of the year just to become eligible for a bowl game.

“I would just as soon have won all those ballgames in the middle of the season that we lost,” said Snyder, who is 210-110-1 since taking over the program in 1988. “But by the same token there’s some great value in that as well, for life, for the young people in our program.

“They recognize it,” he said. “They realize the value in life and I think it helps add to their value system, so to speak, and makes them better people, I think.”

Now, the Wildcats will return most of their starters from a team that ultimately went 8-5 and won its second straight bowl game. Alex Delton and Skylar Thompson, the two quarterbacks who took most of the snaps, will be back along with a veteran offensive line and several skill players.

Their defense should also be stout next season, too, even though standout cornerback and return man D.J. Reed has announced plans to skip his senior season for the NFL draft.

Snyder has a contract that rolls over each year, which means he can essentially choose when to walk away. And he has said the last several years that he makes that decision on a year-by-year basis, based primarily on his health but also the wishes of his family.

Now that his decision has been made, Snyder can go about replacing offensive coordinator Dana Dimel, who left for the top job at UTEP. Dimel had grown unpopular with many Kansas State fans eager for a fresh start, and there are several candidates on the staff that will get consideration, among them former Heisman Trophy candidate Collin Klein and wide receivers coach Andre Coleman.

Snyder can also begin putting the finishing touches on a recruiting class that was nearly filled during the fall, and begin preparing for a season that should again be full of expectations.

Along with its regular conference games, the Wildcats have a trio of home games highlighted by a visit from Mississippi State in early September that should provide a good early barometer.

“It’s pretty obvious we’d have to change course because we didn’t take advantage of the strong finish that we had last year,” Snyder said after the Cactus Bowl. “As you know we were not a real good football team earlier in the season. So whatever that approach was, we’re going to have to change it.

“The main thing is every year’s different. And the dynamics are different regardless of how many young guys you have back, et cetera. And it’s still about the same process. And you’ve heard that, so I won’t repeat all the things that we talk about, what our program’s about and what the process is about, but that is indeed — they understand it. It’s just a matter of doing it.”

Police: Kansas man wounded during series of drive-by shootings

Police on the scene of Monday’s drive by shooting investigation -photo courtesy KAKE

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a series of drive-by shootings and have a possible suspect in custody.

Just before 11p.m. Monday police responded to report of a drive by shooting at a residence in the 2400 Block of West Mosley in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

An investigation revealed that multiple shots were fired at the residence. A white Chrysler and another dark colored vehicle were scene in the area at the time of the crime.  Officers located bullet marks at the home and also shell casings, according to Davidson.  Two 39-year-old men and a 28-year-old woman were at the residence. There were no injuries reported.

A short time later, police responded to report of a drive by shooting at a home in the 1600 Block of East Crowley, according to Davidson.  A 27-year-old man inside the residence was wounded in the leg and shoulder. He was transported to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. A 39-year-old man suffered a head injury. Four other adults were also in the home. Police discovered multiple bullet holes in the residence and a nearby home. Two adults and 3 children were inside that home at the time of crime. They were not injured, according to Davidson.

At about the same time, officers responded to report of a suspicious individual with a weapon near the intersection of Hydraulic and MacArthur in a grey Chrysler 300 shooting multiple shots in the air. Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Deputies located a stolen Chrysler 300 in the 4300 Block of North Deer Lake Street and a 32-year-old man.  Deputies booked the suspect on outstanding warrants, according to Davidson.  Deputies also located a gun and are working to determine a possible connection with the drive-by shooting.

Anyone with information on these incidents is asked to call Wichita Police.

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