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Ruth Mae (Carstens) Bainter

Ruth Mae (Carstens) Bainter was born November 28, 1928 to Henry and Lottie (Benda) Carstens northwest of Jennings, Kansas, the second of 5 children, and passed away on February 22, 2018 at the age of 89. She graduated from Jennings High School in 1946. After that she attended a cosmetology school in Topeka, KS. On January 1, 1947 she married Gayle Clifford Bainter in Topeka. They celebrated 71 years of marriage. They were blessed with three children, Warren Bainter of Oberlin, Judy Gaumer of Oberlin and Wesley Bainter of Hoxie. By the time she was 22 she had all three children in diapers!

Ruth lived in Topeka until 1957 when the family moved to northeast Sheridan County to join Gayle’s father in his family’s farming operation. While in Topeka she worked at Washburn book store during the first part of each semester, after the children were in school fulltime.
Ruth worked as a cook at the Dresden Grade School for several years, and then cooked and became head cook at Jennings School for several more years. Ruth studied and passed the county appraiser’s exam, and became the Decatur County Appraiser for from October, 1987 to September, 1990.

Ruth was a loving and dedicated wife and mother. She raised a large garden each year and canned lots of vegetables for the winter. She raised lots of chickens to butcher and freeze for later in the year. She sold eggs and cream weekly to raise cash for groceries for the family. She was active in the Methodist church, teaching Sunday School and helping with all the church activities. Her life revolved around her family and church continually working to help others. She was a member of Eastern Star and the McGraw Methodist Church.

Ruth was active in charity work. One year she went to Panama for a week on a Rotary Free Eye Clinic for the poor. She cooked at the Methodist Camp Lakeside during several summers. She baked countless cakes, pies and cookies for numerous pot luck dinners and bake sales.

Ruth was predeceased by her parents, brother James Carstens; sisters, Marie Brown and Lucile Larcom; and grandson Adam Gaumer.

She is survived by her husband Gayle, sister Joann Manico of Troy, NY, son Warren (Jan), daughter Judy, and son Wesley (Casey), 10 grandchildren, 9 great-grandchildren, and 2 great-great-grandchildren.

Services will be held at the Hoxie United Methodist Church, Hoxie, Kansas on Monday, February 26, 2018, at 10:30 A.M. with Pastor Jake Schadel presiding. Interment will follow in the Hoxie City Cemetery. Visitation wil be held on Sunday, February 25, 2018, at the Mickey-Leopold Funeral Home from Noon until 7:00 P.M. Memorials are suggested to the McGraw United Methodist Church and may be sent in care of Mickey-Leopold Funeral Home, PO Box 987, Hoxie, Kansas 67740. On-line condolences may be left at www.mickeyleopoldfuneral.com.

Daniel Robert Dunn

Daniel Robert Dunn, age 68 passed away Thursday, February 22, 2018. He was born in Kansas City, Missouri June 26, 1949, the son of Bob & Ione Sevier Dunn.

On December 28, 1968, Dan married Ruth Nettleton in Wichita, Kansas. He graduated from Wichita State University in 1970 and University of Kansas Medical School in 1974. Following a three year family practice residency at Southside Hospital in Bay Shore, New York, the family moved to Colby, Kansas in 1977. In 1979 Dan began his practice in Scott City, Kansas where he served the community for 35 years as a family practice Physician. He loved delivering babies and caring for the sick.

Away from his practice he enjoyed flying his plane, computing, hiking, traveling, and being with his grandchildren. He served on the Scott County Hospital board, the Scott City airport commission, and a member of the Spencer Flight Education Center. He enjoyed his music with Blue Steele and was an avid supporter of Scott City sports. He was a member of the Scott City Church of Christ.

He is survived by his wife, Ruth Dunn of Scott City, Kansas, two daughters—Everett and Rochelle Miller of Scott City, Kansas and Joshua and Denise Cummings of Sugarland, Texas, and a son, David and Stacy Dunn of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Brother Ed and Donna Dunn of Cripple Creek, Colorado and Sister Renee Ebel of Parker, Colorado, and eight grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Bob and Ione Dunn.

Services will be held AT 10:30 A.M. Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at the First Baptist Church in Scott City, Kansas.

In Lieu of Flowers Memorials can be given to Scott Community Hospital, Park Lane Nursing Home or the Spencer Flight Center.

There will be no calling times.

Candidates In Crowded Field for Kan. Governor Strain To Stand Out

By JIM MCLEAN

A crowded race for the Republican nomination for governor in Kansas has candidates looking for ways to stand out.

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach talks at a forum of governor’s candidates while Mark Hutton, left, and Ken Selzer look on.

At a forum held this month in Wichita, the hopefuls signaled how they hope to separate themselves from the field.

Secretary of State Kris Kobach wants primary voters to see him as the true conservative in the contest.

“If you want to see full throttled conservatism in Kansas then I’m your man,” Kobach told a near-capacity crowd at the state GOP convention. “We will go full speed ahead.”

He used a question about property taxes to employ the sort of provocative language that has marked his career, and the campaign in front of him now. Kobach said “stealth” increases in the assessments on his Douglas County farm had made him and his wife “slave farmers.”

“We are growing our crops for Kansas and not ourselves,” he said, claiming it takes nearly all of their relatively small farm income to pay the taxes.

Gov. Jeff Colyer is Kobach’s main rival for the nomination, according to the most recent public poll on the race. He had the flu and sat out the Saturday debate.

The other, lesser-known, candidates pitched themselves as successful business leaders who could bring order to a state government in turmoil.

Willis “Wink” Hartman, a Wichita oil and restaurant businessman who has loaned his campaign $1.6 million and said he was ready to lead a turnaround in Topeka quit the race last week.

But Mark Hutton, the founder of a Wichita-based construction company and a former legislator said he brings something to the table that Hartman doesn’t: Statehouse experience.

“I’m the only candidate up here that has 25 years of CEO experience from the ground up building a company … coupled with four years of legislative experience and, more importantly, the relationships that are going to be necessary to move Kansas forward,” Hutton said.

During his four years in the Kansas House, Hutton compiled a conservative voting record but also earned a reputation for independence as one of the first Republicans to call for a rollback of then Gov. Sam Brownback’s tax cuts.

Kansas Insurance Commissioner Ken Selzer billed himself as a “thoughtful, calm decision-maker,” perhaps in contrast to Kobach’s more combative leadership style.  Repeatedly sounding practiced themes, Selzer promised to “lean in” to the job of reining in spending and growing the Kansas economy.

“We are going to make Kansas grow again,” Selzer said. “Remember that.”

Former state Sen. Jim Barnett watched from the sidelines, barred him from the stage by party officials for refusing to sign rules of participation that he said amounted to censorship.

“‘I’m not going to sign what I think is a debate agreement that is against democracy and the principles of this country,” Barnett said. “I would have spoken the truth and we didn’t hear that tonight. … What we heard tonight was a return to the Brownback/Colyer policies that took our state down to its knees.”

Rather than calling for reduced spending, smaller government and putting the Kansas Supreme Court in its place on the school funding issue, Barnett said he would have advocated for increased education funding and for expanding Medicaid eligibility to an additional 150,000 low-income Kansans.

Barnett was the party’s gubernatorial nominee in 2006 but lost to former Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.

The candidates who participated – Kobach and Hutton in particular – took a hard line on the school funding issue. They insisted it’s the legislature’s job should decide what’s appropriate, not the court.

“We have to clear up this constitutional amendment issue and tell the Supreme Court — the Sebelius Supreme Court — to butt out,” Hutton said.

Kobach cautioned GOP voters against buying the “fake argument” made by supporters of Medicaid expansion that it would help struggling rural hospitals.

“Unfortunately, there are some Republicans who haven’t got the message yet,” he said.

A recent poll by Remington Research Group, a GOP consulting company, showed Kobach and Colyer running neck-and-neck in the early going. Colyer held a 23 percent to 21 percent lead. Barnett was a distant third at 8 percent, followed by Hutton and Hartman at 5 percent each and Selzer at 3 percent.

The tilt-to-the-right tone of the debate scored well with the Republicans who came from around the state for the convention. For instance, retired Wichita teacher Elaine Fisher agreed with attacks on the Kansas Supreme Court over school funding.

“We need to get away from judges controlling how much money the state has to pay for education,” she said.

But the assault on the state’s high court didn’t resonate with everyone. Bill Clifford, a Garden City ophthalmologist and chair of the Finney County Republican Party, says what works in the convention hall may not work with the cross-section of voters needed to win.

“We have a much broader voting population out there,” the western Kansas Republican said. “All the candidates need to touch that group that wasn’t present in the building tonight.”

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Partly sunny, warmer Sunday

Today
Mostly sunny, with a high near 52. Southwest wind 6 to 8 mph.

Tonight
Clear, with a low around 23. Light and variable wind becoming south southwest 5 to 7 mph after midnight.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 60. Windy, with a south wind 8 to 13 mph increasing to 20 to 25 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 36 mph.

Monday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 35. South wind 14 to 18 mph.

Tuesday
Sunny, with a high near 62. South southwest wind 7 to 13 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 31.

Wednesday
Partly sunny, with a high near 47.

Wednesday Night
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26.

Thursday
Sunny, with a high near 52.

Weaver publishes works on writings about J.D. Salinger

Brett Weaver

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Brett Weaver, associate professor of English at Fort Hays State University, recently published two books through Mellen Press in New York.

“An Annotated Bibliography (1982-2016) of Works Published About J.D. Salinger” and “The History of Scholarly Research into the Writings of J.D. Salinger (1986-2016): A Companion to the Annotated Bibliography” will be available in March.

“A Companion to the Annotated Bibliography” has received the D. Simon Evans Award for excellence in research.

Hays student wins DAR Good Citizen Scholarship

Trinity Callis, Hays High School senior

By JUDY SHERARD
Hays DAR

Hays High School senior Trinity Callis was named the winner of the Courtney-Spalding Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution Good Citizen Scholarship.

She was recognized with a certificate, pin and wallet card, as well as a $100 scholarship, at the Feb. 17 chapter meeting.

Trinity, daughter of Ralph and Laci Callis, was nominated as the Hays High DAR Good Citizen by the school’s faculty, Hays High counselor Suellyn Stenger said.

Students selected must exhibit dependability, service, leadership and patriotism, according to the DAR website. “Patriotism means doing what’s right, no matter the circumstances,” Callis said.

In addition to serving as STUCO president, Trinity “is a talented, well-rounded student. She’s awesome,” Stenger said. Trinity also is a member of the musical group TX3 with her brothers, Tristan and Tanner.

Seniors named their school’s DAR Good Citizen have the option of entering the scholarship competition. The competition is two parts including a personal section describing how the student manifests the qualities of a good citizen, grade transcripts and letters of recommendation. A second part is a 550-word essay completed at one sitting without reference materials with no prior knowledge of the topic.

As the local chapter winner, Callis’s essay was entered in the state competition. Mary Hayford, Shawnee Mission, was named the state winner. “It’s a really tough competition,” Sherrie Smith, Courtney-Spalding Chapter Regent, said.

Senior Abria Fisher, daughter of Eva Kenter, was named the Quinter High School DAR Good Citizen.

“All students who are named their school’s Good Citizen, even if they opt not to participate in the essay contest, get a certificate, pin and wallet card, and they can put ‘DAR Good Citizen’ on their resume,” Smith said.

Water use reports to state due March 1

KDA

MANHATTAN, Kan. —The Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Division of Water Resources reminds water right owners throughout the state that the deadline for filing water use reports is March 1. To aid in the reporting process, reports can now be filed online. K.S.A. 82a-732 requires the owner of a water right or permit to file a complete and accurate water use report.

To file online, go to www.kswaterusereport.org to start the process of completing your report. You will use the PIN and personal ID found on the lower left-hand corner of the report form mailed to you in January. Instructions are provided throughout the filing process. If you prefer to file by mail, the completed report form must be postmarked by March 1.

Failing to submit your water use report may result in suspension of all water use under such water right or permit. If the water use report is not received by March 1, the landowner may be assessed a fine for up to $1,000 per water right or permit. Kansas water use data reporting is essential for management of the state’s water resources, to ensure the people of Kansas — and the officials responsible for managing or monitoring water resources — have access to information about how water is used and how much water is used.

For more information or assistance, please contact your local Division of Water Resources office, call the KDA–DWR Manhattan office at 785-564-6638, or visitwww.agriculture.ks.gov/DWR.

Kansas man sentenced for molesting 3 young girls

Garcia-photo Jackson Co.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A 35-year-old Kansas man is likely to spend the rest of his life in prison after being sentenced for molesting three young girls.

A Jackson County, Missouri, judge sentenced Jesus Garcia, of Kansas City, Kansas, on Friday to three life sentences, plus 15 years, all to be served consecutively.

Garcia was convicted in December of statutory rape of a victim younger than 12, child molestation, attempted statutory rape and statutory sodomy of a victim younger than 14.

Court documents say the mother of two of the girls told a social worker in 2016 at Children’s Mercy Hospital that Garcia had been sexually abusing them from 2014 to 2015.

Scott City wins 3-2-1A state wrestling championship; Hoisington 2nd

HAYS – The Scott City Beavers were one of five teams with multiple individual championships at the 3-2-1 A state wrestling tournament this weekend in Hays as they clinched their first state championship since 2012.

Scott City, Eureka, Wabaunsee, Hoxie and Hoisington each finished with two individual state champions.

The Beavers finished with 98.5 total team points, six points ahead of second-place Hoisington who had 92.5. Hoxie was third with 88.5. Smith Center and Silver Lake rounded out the top five team finishers.

Plainville’s Jordan Finnesy works for the takedown at the 3-2-1A state wrestling tournament

Hoisington’s Christopher Ball earned his third straight state title at 152 pounds with a 3-0 win over Smith Center’s Colton Hutchinson in the finals.

His teammate Wyatt Pedigo also earned an individual state championship with a 3-2 win over Minneapolis’ Tyson Villalpando in the finals at 182 pounds.

Hoxie’s Dayton Porch also earned his third straight state title, this time at 145 pounds and he did it with five straight wins by fall. Porch has a three year varsity record of 110-1.

His teammate Chris Cox also brought home gold earning that state title 220 pounds. He had previously finished 3rd and 2nd at 220 pounds.

Hill City’s Alec Segarra finished second at 106 pounds. The junior had one loss all season and placed at the state tournament for the first time after qualifying but not placing last season.

Segarra’s teammate at Hill City Ethan Hamel placed fifth at 145 pounds.

Plainville Jordan Finnesy earned a second-place finish Saturday. His only loss came in the championship match to the defending champing at 160 pounds, Isaiah Luellen of Rossville. Finnesy finished his Sophomore season 38-3.

Indian wrestlers end season at state

SALINA- The Hays High Indians qualified three wrestlers for the 4A state tournament in Salina but they were unable to bring home any hardware.

At 106 pounds Jordan Zimmerman went 0-2 in his first state tournament.

He opened the tournament with a 14- 3 loss to Cruz Lara of Bonner Springs. Then in the first consolation round Zimmerman lost a 10-6 decision to Thad Hendrix of Louisburg.

Zimmerman finished the year 25-17.

Kreighton Meyers dropped his first match of the tournament, a 10-0 major decision to Brett Bober of Burlington but earned two wins on the consolation side of the bracket before losing in the consolation quarterfinals.

Meyers earned a 6-1 win over Justice McGree of Bonner Springs in the first consolation round. He followed that with a 4-3 win over David Leck of Rose Hill.

In the second consolation quarterfinals Meyers lost to Elijah Kennedy of Eudora by a fall in the third period.

Meyers went 2-2 in his first trip to state and finished the season 37-13.

At 285 Logan Schulte opened the tournament with a third-period fall over Terrell Morris of Arkansas City. But suffered back-to-back losses as his tournament came to an end.

In the championship quarterfinals Schulte lost a 1-0 decision to the eventual state champion Tylar Patrick of Wamego. Then in the consolation second round Schulte lost by a first-period fall to Evan Dean of Santa Fe Trail.

Schulte finished his first trip to state 1-2 and finished the season 33-15.

Young’s 27 help Oklahoma top Kansas State, end 6-game skid

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Trae Young scored 27 points to help Oklahoma top Kansas State 86-77 on Saturday and end its six-game losing streak.

Young, the freshman point guard who leads the nation in scoring, was coming off a season-low 11 points in a loss to Kansas earlier in the week. He bounced back by making 7 of 10 shots from the field, including 6 of 9 3-pointers.

Oklahoma hadn’t won a game since Jan. 30 and had dropped two straight at home.

Kansas State handled Young in the first meeting and forced him into 12 turnovers as the Wildcats rolled past the Sooners 87-69 on Jan. 16. In the rematch, Young had five turnovers, though two came well after the Sooners had the game in hand.

Christian James scored 15 points and Brady Manek and Jamuni McNeace each added 10 for the Sooners (17-11, 7-9 Big 12), who shot 53 percent from the field overall and 62 percent in the second half.

Barry Brown scored 28 points and Dean Wade added 15 points and 11 rebounds for Kansas State (20-9, 9-7). The Wildcats made just 4 of 21 3-pointers.

Young matched his 11-point total from the Kansas game in the first eight minutes against Kansas State. He hit a 3-pointer late in the first half to close out an 18-point first half and give the Sooners a 43-35 lead at the break.

James scored in close and was fouled, and he made the free throw to put the Sooners up 52-38 with 15:45 remaining. Young hit a deep 3-pointer to put the Sooners up 55-40, and it looked like Oklahoma might cruise.

Kansas State worked its way back into the game and cut its deficit to 63-56. A 3-pointer and a short floater by Manek helped put the Sooners up 10. Another three by Young made it 71-59 with just under six minutes left, and the Sooners remained in control from there.

BIG PICTURE

Oklahoma: The Sooners desperately needed this one to strengthen its NCAA Tournament resume. Though the Sooners have numerous quality wins, the losing streak was enough to raise questions.

Kansas State: The Wildcats were getting votes for the Top 25, but probably won’t get there with this loss. Overall, a road loss to a solid team likely won’t hurt the Wildcats’ NCAA hopes.

UP NEXT

Kansas State plays at TCU on Tuesday.

Oklahoma plays at Baylor on Tuesday.

Tiger softball struggles to find hits in loss to Sioux Falls

ST. CLOUD, Minn. – Fort Hays State fell to Sioux Falls by a score of 2-0 on Saturday (Feb. 24) at the Kelly Laas Memorial Tournament. The Tigers scratched out just one hit and could not take advantage of six walks allowed along with a hit by pitch. FHSU moved to 2-12 overall, while Sioux Falls improved to 2-3 overall.

Like Friday’s loss to Augustana, the opponent did all of its damage in one inning against FHSU. Sioux Falls plated two runs thanks to a double followed by a two-run home run by Frankie Mickelson in the sixth inning to break a scoreless tie.

Tiger pitcher Hailey Chapman went the distance in the game, shutting the Cougars out for five innings. She did not allow a hit through the first three innings. Despite her two-run blemish in the sixth, Chapman struck out four and allowed eight hits with two walks.

Sioux Falls used a pair of pitchers in the game to combine for one hit allowed. Starter Kerrigan Hoshaw allowed one hit and four walks, but did not get a decision in her four innings pitched due to the game being scoreless when she handed the ball over to reliever Courtney Mathews. The USF reliever tossed three innings of no-hit ball, with two walks and a hit batter. Lily Sale had the only hit for FHSU to lead off the third.

The Tigers had runners reach scoring position in just two innings, both times at second base. They had a pair of runners on at first and second with one out in the seventh, but a lineout and pop out ended the game.

The Tigers play two games on Sunday at the tournament. They face No. 1 ranked Minnesota State at 7 am before taking on tournament host St. Cloud State at 11 am.

Tiger men No. 7 seed for MIAA Tournament; host Lindenwood Tuesday

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Fort Hays State will be the No. 7 seed and host Lindenwood Tuesday night in the opening round of the MIAA Tournament. The winner advances to the quarterfinals where they will face No. 2 seed Missouri Southern at 2:15pm Friday.

Northwest Missouri, who wrapped up the outright MIAA title with their win over Lincoln Saturday, is the top seed. The Bearcats will await the winner of #8 Pittsburg State and #9 Lincoln in a game that will be played at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 27 in Pittsburg, Kan.

Washburn has picked up the third seed and will face either #6 Nebraska Kearney or #11 Southwest Baptist when they face off on Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. in Kearney, Neb. Central Oklahoma will be the fourth seed in the tournament and await the winner of #5 Central Missouri and #12 Missouri Western who face off on Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. in Warrensburg, Mo.

Men’s quarterfinals on Kansas City are slated for 12:00 p.m., 2:30 p.m., 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. on Friday, March 2 from Municipal Auditorium.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018 (Campus Sites)
Game 1: #9 Lincoln at #8 Pittsburg State 7:00 p.m.
Game 2: #12 Missouri Western at #5 Central Missouri 7:00 p.m.
Game 3: #11 Southwest Baptist at #6 Nebraska Kearney 7:00 p.m.
Game 4: #10 Lindenwood at #7 Fort Hays State 7:00 p.m.

Friday, March 2, 2018 (Municipal Auditorium Kansas City, Mo.)
Game 5: #3 Washburn vs. Winner Game 3 12:00 p.m.
Game 6: #2 Missouri Southern vs. Winner Game 4 2:15 p.m.
Game 7: #1 Northwest Missouri vs. Winner Game 1 6:00 p.m.
Game 8: #4 Central Oklahoma vs. Winner Game 2 8:15 p.m.

Saturday, March 3, 2018 (Municipal Auditorium Kansas City, Mo.)
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Winner Game 6 6:00 p.m.
Game 10: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8 8:15 p.m.

Sunday, March 4, 2018 (Municipal Auditorium Kansas City, Mo.)
Game 11: Semifinal Winners 3:30 p.m.

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