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Sunny, windy Wednesday

Today Sunny, with a high near 63. Wind chill values as low as 5 early. Windy, with a south wind 7 to 12 mph increasing to 20 to 25 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 38 mph.

Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 38. Breezy, with a south wind 15 to 20 mph decreasing to 9 to 14 mph after midnight.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 68. South southwest wind 8 to 14 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Thursday Night Mostly cloudy, with a low around 32. East northeast wind 8 to 13 mph.

Friday A chance of snow and sleet before 8am, then a chance of rain between 8am and 2pm, then a chance of rain and snow after 2pm. Cloudy, with a high near 36. Windy, with a north northeast wind 16 to 21 mph increasing to 23 to 28 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Friday Night A 20 percent chance of snow before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 15. Blustery.

Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 43.

Harold Arthur Dick

Harold Arthur Dick, 83, of Russell, Kansas, died on Sunday, February 11, 2018, at the Russell Regional Hospital in Russell, Kansas.

Harold was born on April 08, 1934, in Lucas, Kansas, the son of Arthur Michael and Edith Mae (Thacker) Dick. He grew up in Lucas and graduated from Lucas High School in 1952. He worked for RC Williams as a truck driver. He also formerly worked for Koch Industries and worked for the Union Pacific Railroad. He was a member of St. Mary Queen of Angels Catholic Church in Russell. He was also a 3rd degree member of the Knights of Columbus and a 4th degree Past Faithful Navigator. He enjoyed traveling and riding his motorcycle.

Surviving family include his daughter Jeanine Innes (John) of Kansas City, Kansas; sons Michael Dick (Kathy) and Kevin Dick all of Russell, Kansas; daughters Tina Langerman (Larry) of Wilson, Kansas and Mary Saryerwinnie (Dennis) of Arizona and many grandchildren.

A memorial graveside service to celebrate Harold’s life will be held at 10:30 A.M. on Monday, April 09, 2018, at the Lucas Cemetery in Lucas, Kansas. Visitation will be 1 P.M. to 8 P.M. on Sunday, April 08, 2018, at the mortuary with family present to greet guests from 6 P.M. to 7 P.M. Sunday evening Memorials can be given to St. Mary Queen of Angels Catholic Church or Toys For Tots and sent in care of the mortuary. Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, Kansas, is in charge of the memorial service arrangements.

K-State’s Wainright charged, suspended from team

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State junior guard Amaad Wainright is suspended from the Wildcats basketball team after being charged when someone allegedly fired shots from his car in January.

Wainright -photo Johnson Co.

The U.S. Marshals Service says Wainright was arrested Tuesday in Kansas City. He is charged with obstruction, and fleeing and eluding.

The charges stem from an incident Jan. 17 in Overland Park, Kansas. Police said a passenger in Wainright’s car fired a handgun into another car in a possible road rage incident. No one was injured and no one was arrested at the time.

Kansas State athletic director Gene Taylor says Wainright has been suspended indefinitely. His status will be re-evaluated after the investigation is complete.

Wainright a junior guard, didn’t respond to an email to his student account Tuesday.

Man convicted in torture, killing of Kansas man

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — One of five people charged in the torture and killing of a Wichita man over a $185 meth deal has been convicted.

<img class=”size-thumbnail wp-image-253014″ src=”https://thepost.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/Screen-Shot-2016-11-10-at-5.08.52-AM-150×150.png” alt=”” width=”150″ height=”150″ /> Morris-photo Sedgwick Co.

Willie Morris, 57, was found guilty Tuesday of 10 counts, including first-degree murder, in the November 2016 death of 33-year-old Scottie Goodpaster Jr.

Goodpaster’s mutilated body was found Nov. 12 in a Harvey County field, about a week after the crime began in Valley Center.

<img class=”size-thumbnail wp-image-252682″ src=”https://thepost.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/Screen-Shot-2016-11-07-at-1.23.31-PM-150×150.png” alt=”” width=”150″ height=”150″ /> Goodpaster

Investigators say Goodpaster was tortured and a woman was forced to watch, stemming from $185 lost in a methamphetamine deal.

Sentencing was scheduled for May 18.

The four other defendants remained in the Sedgwick County Jail on Tuesday.

Abortions in Kansas down slightly in 2017

KDHE

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has published a report titled Abortions in Kansas, 2017, Preliminary Report. The total number of abortions reported in 2017, 6,782, is 0.4 percent fewer than reported in 2016, 6,810. In-state residents slightly outnumbered out-of-state residents, 3,405 reports to 3,377.

State law requires that physicians and hospitals report abortions they perform to KDHE.

The Woman’s Right-to-Know Act requires physicians who perform abortions to provide informed-consent information to a woman 24 hours before an abortion procedure and to certify to KDHE the number of informed-consents obtained annually.

This report is a preliminary analysis of these data as collected by the KDHE Bureau of Epidemiology and Public Health Informatics. It is comprised of two PDF file sections: data summary and appendices. The report can be viewed online at https://www.kdheks.gov/phi/abortion_sum/2017_Preliminary_Abortion_Report.pdf.

Hays High soccer tops Dodge in 2OT


By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan.-It was a classic Western Athletic Conference soccer battle in Hays on Tuesday afternoon as the Hays High Lady Indians and the Dodge City Lady Demons tangled. The cold and windy conditions proved to be difficult to handle as quality shots on goal were hard to come by. Hays High used the strong northerly wind to control the ball on the Dodge City half of the field in the first half but could not find the back of the net as the two teams played to a 0-0 tie at the break.

The Lady Indians continued to control the ball and the pace in the second half giving Dodge City very few opportunities to score. Hays was able to place a couple of quality shots on goal only to have them turned back by some nice saves by the Lady Demon keeper. After regulation, the score remained 0-0.

The first 10 minute overtime failed to produce a goal for either team but it didn’t take long to end things in overtime number two. With the wind at their backs the Lady Indians made a run towards the Dodge City goal and Hannah McGuire found Savannah Schneider on the left side and Schneider punched the ball in the left edge of the goal to give Hays the 1-0 victory.

It was the fifth goal of the season for Schneider. Hays High improves to 3-2 on the season and 1-0 in the WAC. They have little time to celebrate as they will hit the road on Thursday to face Liberal.

SILAS HIBBS INTERVIEW

 

 

Kan. man sentenced for drunk driving, leaving crash scene

SHAWNEE, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man has been sentenced to more than three years in prison for driving drunk and injuring a bicyclist.

Hall-photo Johnson Co.

40-year-old Kevin Eugene Hall was sentenced Monday after a jury found him guilty of aggravated battery and fleeing the scene of an injury accident.

Prosecutors say Hall had been drinking at a bar and purchased alcohol at a store in the hours before the September 2015 crash in Shawnee.

Hall’s attorneys had argued there’s no evidence of Hall’s intoxication level at the time of the wreck or that he was the driver of the vehicle when the bicyclist was hit.

Evidence included Hall’s phone in the vicinity around the time of the crash and blood on Hall’s car linking the victim.

Sheriff: Kansas woman lost $399 to online scam

SALINE COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a reported computer scam.

A rural Saline County woman told deputies she turned on her computer February 19 to a black screen with an 800 number to call for help to get it working again, according to Sheriff Roger Soldan.

She called the number and talked to a man who said someone in Nigeria had accessed her computer for pornography. The 65-year-old woman was offered a 9-year protection plan for $399.99 which she paid through Pay-Pal.

The woman called the Sheriff’s Office on Monday after having family over at Easter who told her they believed she was a victim of a scam

Woman in pink hoodie, ski mask robs Kan. restaurant

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a robbery and have a description of a suspect.

Just before 10a.m., police responded to the Subway Restaurant at 2518 SW 17th Street in Topeka after a robbery to the business had just occurred.

Scene of Tuesday morning robbery-google image

Employees told police a white female in her 50’s, wearing a pink or peach colored pullover hoodie with a white ski mask and off white gloves entered the business, displayed a small dark colored handgun and demanded money.

The woman was given an undisclosed amount of money and she then left the business. The suspect possibly left the area in an unknown make/model small blue vehicle. There were no injuries reported in this crime.

Detectives and Crime Scene investigators responded to process the scene and gather evidence.

Anyone with any information relating to this crime; please call the Topeka Police Department at 785-368-9400 or Crime Stoppers at 785-234-0007.

Leveraging intellectual property for success

Mark Radtke

The free presentation “Leveraging Intellectual Property for Success” will be held Wed., April 18th , 1:30-3 pm. in the Memorial Union Ballroom at Fort Hays State University.

Mark Radtke, Assistant Director of the Rocky Mountain Regional U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, will be discussing the importance of intellectual property for startups, small businesses, independent inventors, students and entrepreneurs.

Common questions will be addressed and answered such as: what resources are available, how to proceed with filing, what are the benefits of obtaining a patent, trademark or copyright, what fee reductions are available for individuals and small businesses, etc.

Immediately after the presentation Radtke will be available for one-on-one discussions.

You can sign up for the free event at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/leveraging-intellectual-property-for-success-hays-ks-tickets-44379154245 or just show up!

Questions? Please contact the Kansas Small Business Development Center at FHSU at (785) 628-5615 or [email protected].

This event is presented by the United States Patent and Trademark Office and the Kansas SBDC at FHSU.

Junis impressive as Royals beat Tigers for 1st win

DETROIT (AP) – Jake Junis took a shutout into the eighth inning, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on Tuesday for their first victory of the season.

On a chilly, rainy day – with snow a possibility on Wednesday – the Tigers and Royals breezed through nine innings in 2 hours, 17 minutes. Jorge Soler, who still doesn’t have a major league hit since July 2, drove in the game’s only run with a sacrifice fly in the second.

Junis (1-0) allowed three hits in seven-plus innings. The 25-year-old right-hander walked one and struck out six before being lifted following Mikie Mahtook’s leadoff single in the eighth.

Justin Grimm finished that inning, and Kelvin Herrera struck out two in a perfect ninth for his first save.

Matthew Boyd (0-1) was sharp for the Tigers, allowing a run and four hits in six innings.

The only run came after Cheslor Cuthbert led off the second with a flare that dropped over first baseman Miguel Cabrera and bounced down the line. By the time Cabrera retrieved the ball, Cuthbert had a double. He went to third on a flyout and scored on Soler’s flyball.

Soler went 0 for 2 and is hitless in his last 31 at-bats in the majors.

Cabrera struck out with two on in the third, and the Tigers missed a scoring chance in the fourth when James McCann hit what looked at first like a clean line drive up the middle. Second baseman Whit Merrifield was shifted over, however, and made the catch – then doubled Nicholas Castellanos off first.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: 1B Lucas Duda sat out after leaving Monday’s game with right hamstring tightness.

Tigers: Manager Ron Gardenhire said RHP Mike Fiers (lumbar strain) felt good after throwing a simulated game.

UP NEXT

Detroit’s Daniel Norris faces Kansas City’s Danny Duffy (0-1) on Wednesday, weather permitting.

News From the Oil Patch, April 3

By JOHN P. TRETBAR

Oklahoma lawmakers approved that state’s first tax increase in nearly three decades, but the state’s teachers say it’s not enough. The first tax increase in 28 years raises the gross production tax on oil and gas to five percent, adds a $1.00 tax on cigarettes, six cents a gallon on diesel fuel and three cents on gasoline. Teacher pay raises within the legislation are expected to average about $6,000 per year, but the Oklahoma Education Association and the Oklahoma Public Employees Association said it’s not enough. A large group of teachers and supporters walked off the job Monday and Tuesday for rallies at the State Capitol.

Former ConocoPhillips executive James Gallogly is the new president of the University of Oklahoma, after a vote Monday by the board of regents. Gallogly officially succeeds David Boren July 1.

Baker Hughes reported a drop of seven oil rigs in its weekly drilling rig count Friday, and an increase of four rigs exploring for natural gas, for a total of 993, The count in Canada was down 27 to 134 active rigs. Independent Oil & Gas Service reported nine rigs actively drilling in eastern Kansas, down four, and 30 west of Wichita, which was up two. Drilling is underway at sites in Barton, Ellis and Stafford counties. Operators are moving in completion tools at one site in Barton County, six leases in Ellis County, one in Russell County and three in Stafford County.

Operators last week filed 18 permits for drilling at new locations across Kansas, eight east of Wichita and ten in western Kansas, including one each in Barton, Ellis and Stafford counties. So far this year, we’ve seen 381 new drilling permits statewide.

Independent Oil & Gas Service reported 37 new well-completions across Kansas for the week, 402 so far this year. Operators completed 21 wells in the eastern Kansas and 16 west of Wichita. That includes one completion in Russell County and one in Stafford County.

Utah officials are going after a pair of Colorado-based oil and gas companies after regulators said the firms failed to report production figures from leases on state lands. The Salt Lake Tribune reports regulators are considering shutting down 52 wells in an effort to collect an estimated $330,000 in delinquent royalties for the state’s education trust fund.

Negotiators could not agree on a plan for spending Mississippi’s share of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill damages in time to meet the deadline Monday night. The failure likely means at least part of the $750 million will remain in the bank another year. Lawmakers agreed to establish a special fund, but could not agree on whether legislators or appointed trustees should control the account.

After spending hundreds of millions of dollars building rail terminals able to handle more than a million barrels a day of oil, Canadian producers are discovering that all the loading capacity in the world isn’t sufficient if there aren’t enough locomotives, conductors and track space to transport the oil. Production in western Canada will exceed pipeline capacity by 338,000 barrels by the end of the year, according to analysis in the Vancouver Sun. The country’s railroads have been slow to respond without long-term commitments, as they struggle with a harsh winter and large numbers of grain shipments. The area’s benchmark crude has traded more than $20 a barrel below WTI since December.

The Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia tells Reuters that they’re considering a 10-to-20 year agreement with Moscow to extend their short term oil production curbs, adding they have agreement on the big picture but not yet on the detail.”

China is taking its first steps towards paying for imported crude oil in yuan instead of the U.S. dollar, a key development in Beijing’s efforts to establish its currency internationally. The news comes about a week after the opening of crude futures trading in Shanghai. Sources told Reuters a pilot program for yuan payment could be launched as early as the second half of this year. China is the world’s second-largest oil consumer and in 2017 overtook the United States as the biggest importer of crude oil. Its demand is a key determinant of global oil prices.

Saudi Aramco and MIT announced a new five-year, $25 million collaboration for new research and development. In a news release Tuesday the oil company said it would focus on everything from carbon capture and renewable energy to robotics and nanotechnology.

According to Arab news reports, Aramco also participated in a forum of chief executives in New York, joining 200 executives and government officials to promote trade. Aramco reportedly joined agreements valued at more than $10 billion with 14 U.S. companies.

Russia’s oil output edged up in March to an 11-month high of 10.97 million barrels per day, slightly above a limit agreed under a global supply pact. Reuters reported it’s the first increase in Russian output since December and the country’s highest level in a year.

Bahrain, the smallest energy producer in the Persian Gulf, discovered its biggest oil field since it started producing crude in 1932. The country’s official news agency did not offer specifics, but said the deposit off the island state’s west coast “is understood to dwarf Bahrain’s current reserves,” estimated at nearly 125 million barrels.

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