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HHS tennis fares well at home meet

HAYS, Kan. – The Hays High boys tennis team had one first place finish and two second place finishers at their own invitational held yesterday at Fort Hays State.

The No. 1 doubles team of Logan Clark and Zac Wyse went 4-0 and finished first. Eli Booth went 2-1 and finished second in No. 2 singles.

The No. 2 doubles team of Seth Shorb and Brandon Kennemer also went 2-1 and finished second.

Drew Morley was third in No. 1 singles and the No. 1 doubles team of Alex Bogart and Skylar Reuber-Howland finished third.

FHSU men’s golf finishes fifth at the Southern Colorado Masters

PUEBLO, Colo. – The Fort Hays State men’s golf team claimed a fifth-place finish at the Southern Colorado Masters on Tuesday, hosted by Colorado State-Pueblo at the Pueblo Country Club, a 6522 yard, par-71 golf course.

Senior Skyler Tebo finished in a tie for eighth individually after posting rounds of 70-71-71 for a cumulative score of one-under par (212). Mac McNish finished second on the squad with a tie for 21st overall after shooting a score of 218 after firing rounds of 77, 70 and 71. McNish’s second round was his team-leading second under-par round of the season.

Connor Schultz shot rounds of 78, 73 and 72, finishing in a tie for 29th. Lane Pauls hit rounds of 76, 73 and 77 for a total of 13-over par and a tie for 34th individually. Seve Sites shot rounds of 75, 77 and 79.

Colorado State-Pueblo took home the team title with an aggregate score of 839. Colorado School of Mines placed second after finishing a total score of 847. Colorado Mesa shot an 858. Fort Hays State posted team scores of 298, 287 and 291 on their way to a total of 876. FHSU’s second round was its first sub-290 score in more than six years (10/10/11, 289 at Park University Fall Invite). Nathan McCann of Colorado State-Pueblo captured the individual title with a 9-under par (204) score for the tournament.

The Tigers are back in action next week when they travel to Edmond, Okla. to compete in the MIAA Broncho Stampede, hosted at Rose Creek Golf Course (April 16-17).

Lady Indians shut out Great Bend


By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan.-The Hays High Lady Indians their second straight game with a 2-0 shutout of Great Bend on Tuesday afternoon in Hays. It was another game where the Lady Indians controlled the ball much of the game. Despite that ball control the game remained scoreless at halftime.

The second half featured more Lady Indian control along with a couple of goals and some of the intensity you would expect from the two Western Athletic Conference rivals. Kallie Leiker drew first blood in the 54th minute to give the Lady Indians the 1-0 lead. Hays High was able to put the game away in the 73rd minute when Allison Shubert crossed the ball in front of the goal and connected with Cori Isbell who put the ball in the back of the net for the final score of the game.

The Lady Indians have won four out of their last five with a tie mixed in the middle of those four wins. Hays improves to 5-2-1 on the season and are now 2-0-1 in the WAC. They are off until April 16th when they host Garden City at 4pm.

SILAS HIBBS INTERVIEW

 

FHSU women’s golf finishes 12th at the Central Region Spring Preview

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – The Fort Hays State women’s golf team captures a 12th place finish at the Central Region Spring Preview (April 9-10) hosted at Rivercut Golf Course in Springfield, Mo, a 5,911-yard, par-72 golf course. The Tigers shot rounds of 331 and 335 to finish 90-over par (666) for the tournament.

Junior Hannah Perkins led Fort Hays State as she earned a top-25 finish in a tie for 23rd individually. She posted identical rounds of 79 to finish 14-over par (158) for the week.

Taylor DeBoer tied for 52nd individually with rounds of 82 and 86. Freshman Katie Brungardt shot rounds of 81 and 90 on her way to a tie for 60th. Madison Roether shot rounds of 89 and 84.

Arkansas Tech took home the team title, shooting 25-over par (601). Southwestern Oklahoma State finished runner-up with rounds of 301 and 314 (615), while Northeastern State claimed third with a 616. Anna Pool of Central Oklahoma captured the individual crown with a 2-over par score (146) for the tournament.

The Tigers will take a week off before traveling to Grand Junction, Colo. to compete in the Maverick Spring Invitational, hosted at the Golf Club at Redlands Mesa (April 16-17).

TMP-Marian softball sweeps Ellis

ELLIS, Kan. – It’s been quite a week for TMP-Marian’s Bailey Lacy. Monday she struck out 25 over 11 innings in a pair of wins in Colby. Tuesday she fanned 13 and allowed only one hit over seven innings of work as the Monarchs cruised past Ellis 18-2 and 22-0.

Emilee Augustine homered and drove in two in the first game which was called after four innings.

Anna Gottschalk doubled twice and drove in four in the second game. Emilee Augustine also doubled and drove in four as the Monarchs won their fourth straight to improved to 5-3.

Man charged in death of rural Kansas woman

LINDWOOD, Kan. (AP) — A northeast Kansas man is charged in the death of a woman who was reported missing last week.

Flannagan- photo Leavenworth Co. Sheriff

Leavenworth County Attorney Todd Thompson says 63-year-old Dan Flannagan was charged Friday with second-degree murder in the death of 61-year-old Constance Perryman.

A family member reported Perryman missing Thursday night. Her body was found on farm property south of Linwood.

Flannagan and Perryman lived on the property where her body was found.

Leavenworth County Undersheriff Jim Sherley says Perryman apparently was shot.

Sherley say a disagreement at the home apparently led to the shooting but the investigation is continuing.

Monarch baseball stays unbeaten

ELLIS, Kan. – The TMP-Marian baseball team is 6-0 after a pair of run-rule wins in Ellis. The Monarchs raced out to an early 5-0 lead then scored four in the fourth and fifth to win game one 13-2 in five innings. They scored in every inning in the second game including five in the fourth and fifth for a 15-0 victory.

Both games were called after five.

Creighton Renz and Luke Ruder both drove in four in the first game. Chase Werth homered and knocked in two. Cole Zimmerman struck out seven over four innings for the win.

Werth drove in three in the second game and pitched two scoreless innings of relief. Tate Garcia gets the win, allowing one hits over three innings.

Father of missing Kan. boy to hire private investigator

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The father of a 5-year-old Wichita boy who’s been missing for nearly two months is planning to hire a private investigator.

Lucas Hernandez

Jonathan Hernandez, father of Lucas Hernandez, has set up an online fund to raise money to help find his son.

Jonathan Hernandez says he plans to hire investigators from Nederland, Texas.

Lucas Hernandez was reported missing on Feb. 17 from his home in Wichita. His stepmother reported he went missing after she put him down for a nap and took a shower. Extensive searches have found no sign of the boy.

His stepmother, 26-year-old Emily Glass, is jailed on $50,000 bond on a child endangerment charge involving her 1-year-old daughter. She has not been charged in Lucas’ disappearance.

Kansas could provide free ACT testing for high schoolers

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas could soon provide free college admission testing to its high school students.

A provision in a school finance bill approved by legislators would set aside $2.8 million for one ACT test and three WorkKeys vocational assessments for each student statewide.

Republican Sen. Molly Baumgardner of Louisburg said Tuesday that ACT tests are critical to college applications but are often too expensive for some students.

The State Department of Education says that in 2017, 60 percent of high school graduates took the ACT nationwide and 73 percent in Kansas. Baumgardner wants 100 percent.

Baumgardner said with free ACT testing, every student will have a chance to show colleges what they know, making higher education more accessible. She is an author of the provision and the Senate Education Committee’s chairwoman.

UPDATE: Husband of woman whose body was in dumpster arrested in Iowa

SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a murder and have made an arrest.

Stafford-photo Scott Co. Sheriff

Just after 6p.m. Sunday, police responded to an emergency medical services call in the parking lot of a liquor store in the 1700 Block of South Seneca in Wichita. First responders found the body of a woman in the dumpster behind the business, according to officer Charley Davidson.

Early Monday, authorities were able to identify 37-year-old Leuh Moore as the victim, according to Police Lt. Todd Ojile.

With that information, investigators responded to her address in the 1100 Block of West Dayton in Wichita. Investigators spoke with neighbors in the area and learned the victim lived there with her husband and a child.

As investigators entered the residence they looked for the child and to make sure nobody else was injured inside the residence, according to Ojile. Investigators were able piece together the events that occurred and issued a felony pickup for the woman’s 30-year-old husband and a vehicle that belongs to her.  A State Trooper checking motels in the area located the vehicle, according to Ojile.   Donnell Casey Danter Stafford is being held by authorities in a Scott County, Iowa Jail, according to the daily booking report.

Investigators worked until early Tuesday processing the crime scene. Just before 9:30 Tuesday morning, the husband and vehicle were located in Davenport, Iowa, according to Ojile. State Troopers and Davenport police arrested him.

Sunday night crime scene photo courtesy KWCH

Law enforcement authorities will present the case to the district attorney Tuesday afternoon, according to Ojile. They will travel to Iowa on Wednesday.

Investigators believe the suspect took to the couple’s 7-year-old son to a relative’s house after his mother was killed. Two dogs at the home were stabbed and were taken to a vet for treatment.
Ojile says the couple had a history of domestic violence but do not know what led to the murder.

MORAN: Farmers and ranchers can’t afford a trade war

Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS)

When people in rural Kansas talk to me about a farm crisis or economic depression, they unfortunately aren’t talking about the dust bowl of the 1930s or farm credit crisis of the 1980s – they’re talking about the ongoing crisis in farm country today where low commodity prices and severe drought have pushed many agricultural producers to the edge of an economic cliff. America’s trade relationships are, now more than ever, tied to the success of rural America, and we must make certain we negotiate responsibly so that our farmers and ranchers can continue to make a living by feeding and clothing the world.

Farm commodity prices have hovered at or below the cost of production for nearly half a decade, wiping out farmers’ savings and forcing many producers to take on more debt to keep family operations alive. Each morning, my office posts daily commodity prices from across Kansas for visitors to see, such as the price of wheat in Colby and price of soybeans in Hiawatha. The prices show what farmers receive per bushel of grain at the local elevator, but they also reflect the financial lifeblood of these towns and the thousands of rural communities across the country that are suffering due to the current farm disaster. These commodity prices are often a topic of conversation between visitors to my office, and more often than not, these Kansans have personally felt – or know someone who has – the strain of this recession.

In addition to alarmingly low prices, we’ve received little to no rain across much of the high plains for months. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated 24 Kansas counties as primary natural disaster areas so far due to severe drought conditions – and I’m working with my colleagues to extend and expand these designations as conditions don’t seem to be improving. While above-average yields the past several years have helped farmers and ranchers survive low commodity prices, I fear low prices, plus a drought, may be more than many producers can withstand.

Recently I was in Kensington, Kan., when I drove past such a large grain pile on the ground waiting for mouths to feed that I was compelled to pull over and take a photo. I’ve kept the photo with me ever since and have used it as a visual reminder of the reality our Kansas farmers face. In meetings with Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, USTR representatives and numerous Kansas farmers, the reaction has been the same: How do we fix this?

First and foremost, we must have a solid path toward an end result in our trade negotiations with China. We cannot escalate a fight between a significant purchaser of what we produce in Kansas with no real end goal. My hope is that this is a negotiating tactic, but the efforts we see now suggest more than that, as they keep being ramped up by both countries: the United States imposes tariffs, China responds. The United States imposes tariffs, China responds. Then United States responds to that, and so on. In addition, we ought not forget about recent ill-advised tariffs on solar cells, washing machines and steel and aluminum that have resulted in our farmers and ranchers – through no fault of their own – being caught in the middle of an escalating trade dispute with China and other global trading partners.

Frustratingly, the administration continues to push trade policies that threaten to further drive down farm prices and extend the recession in rural America into the foreseeable future. For example, TPP negotiations has put American agricultural exports at a disadvantage to foreign competitors, and contentious NAFTA renegotiations with Canada and Mexico, which alternate between being the number one market for agricultural products in Kansas, are no closer to being resolved. Our economy in Kansas is dependent on the ability of our farmers, ranchers and manufacturers to trade their products. In 2016, Kansas exported more than $4.5 billion worth of agricultural products, which supported more than 36,000 jobs and generated more than $5.7 billion in economic activity, making these negotiations all the more important.

The responsibility to respond to the farm disaster falls to both the administration and Congress. First, we ought to stop self-inflicting wounds on trade. Tough enforcement of trade rules is a good idea, especially when it comes to dealing with China, but a trade war is not. Instead, the president ought to build off his success from last year in negotiating access for American beef to China by directing his administration to aggressively pursue bilateral trade agreements and other opportunities to expand agricultural exports. For Congress, passing a new farm bill that strengthens the farm safety net, protects crop insurance and invests in trade promotion programs must be on top of the to-do list.

Agricultural producers are no strangers to tough times. Resiliency is a necessary and defining character trait of those who have passed down family-owned farming and ranching operations for generations. These American producers have learned to live with challenges outside of their control, such as weather and global markets, but also spring to action when they can improve their situations. Congress and the administration ought to take to heart the same lesson – we can’t make it rain or dictate prices, but through sound policies, especially on trade, our nation can better respond to the disaster in farm country and improve the livelihoods of American farmers and ranchers.

Jerry Moran represents Kansas in the U.S. Senate and is a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.

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