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GILLILAND: Xtreme Wildlife Rescue

My wife has gotten hooked on a couple British TV shows that are all about rescuing wildlife, and the British take that VERY seriously. Thing is, they rescue wildlife that don’t need or really shouldn’t be rescued. In one particular segment of the show they repaired the broken leg of a robin. Really? Now I like robins as well as the next guy, but I’ll bet the money spent on that operation could have bought real guns for a few of their “Bobbies” to carry instead of just nightsticks! If only the Brits’ put as much effort into finding a new phrase to replace “Bloody Hell!”

Steve Gilliland

Some of the things they rescue on the shows are huge boa constrictors and pythons that have evidently been turned loose by disenchanted owners who possibly awoke one morning to find the beast wrapped around one of their body parts, prepping them as a snack. They bag them and take them back to their rehab center, where they weigh, measure and check them over to assure they are healthy. Now I’m a snake guy and snakes don’t bother me, but if I came across a snake like that, the rescuers would find it VERY unhealthy when I delivered it. And then there’s the question of what to do with them. Unless they plan to UPS them back to Africa where they belong, they can’t just turn them loose in the neighbor’s hayfield. I wonder if British homeless shelters accept snake meat.

Then there are the badgers. The British version of a badger looks slightly different than ours, and they don’t seem to be mean at all, but they’re everywhere! Not an episode of the show goes by that they don’t scoop up a badger from someone’s flower garden. They have an entire commune of badgers back at their facility that will eventually be released back into the wild. If word ever got out that I caught and released a badger in these parts, I’d be the one needing rehab! And heaven forbid one of them should appear a little sickly; if so, it’s all hands on deck and the animal ER springs to life!  And if one of the little beggars happens to expire on their watch, it’s Katie-bar-the-door and the whole staff appears to need grief counseling. I’ve come to wonder if they’ll shed as many tears at their “mum’s” passing.

Bob the Vulture

A couple years back the North American Falconry Association (NAFA) held its annual convention in Hutchinson, KS.  Amongst all the exotic birds of prey from all around the world sat Bob the Turkey Vulture. Now Bob was regal in his own way, but setting there on his perch with his wings all fanned out, he looked like Goofy in a room full of Snow Whites. Bob’s story begins with falconers Mario and Brandi Nickerson from Ft. Worth, TX who also run Nature’s Edge Wildlife Rescue, specializing in rescuing (there’s that word again) reptiles and birds of prey. Some years back they got some calls about an errant buzzard in town, and one evening they were told the thing was waltzing around in the middle of the football field while practice was in session. Can you imagine; to a football field full of city boys that must have seemed like the stone gargoyle had come down from the front of the court house. The local animal control people were afraid to approach Bob, probably fearing he was Dracula in disguise and would pounce on them for a snack.  When they arrived, Bob was on the roof of the house next door, so they retrieved a dead squirrel found stuck in the fence and tossed it near the house. Bob unceremoniously flew on down and began gnawing on their offering. With tarps, nets, an open pet crate at the ready and EMT’s on standby they surrounded ole’ Bob, expecting a rodeo, but he again called their bluff and simply waddled into the crate with his treat in his mouth.

Back at the Nickerson’s home, the crate containing Bob was put temporarily in their kitchen till they could figure out Bob’s story. Maybe a vulture in your kitchen is the Texas equivalent of a garbage disposal? I’m thinkin’ that to the British wildlife “rescuers,” having a buzzard in your kitchen would put you right up there on a pedestal with the Queen mum herself. Anyway, Brandi said that the next morning when the cage door was opened and she stood there with Bob’s breakfast (one can only guess what that might have been) he charged out the door and across the kitchen aggressively for his hand-out. Long-story-short, they were pretty sure that given Bob’s reaction to humans and other physical characteristics they saw, he had been raised by humans and recently turned loose to fend for himself. I’m not sure what someone was thinking when they took in a turkey vulture chick as a pet. Did they not consider that one day it would grow into a full-grown buzzard?  Would walking him through the park on a Sunday afternoon get as many girls as a puppy? I suppose you could always fly him like a kite.

The Nickerson’s credentials allow them to keep ole’ Bob for educational purposes which is good. I can only guess what goes through a first grader’s mind when seeing a live turkey vulture close up.  Although not really considered a pet, can you imagine the conversation starter Bob would be?  And would you list him in your profile on an online dating site? “Outdoors loving animal rescue hero with pet turkey vulture looking for gal who likes black and has always wanted a pet buzzard in her kitchen” Anyway, I’m glad ole’ Bob has found a good home, and who knows, maybe he can be trained to start the dishwasher and run the vacuum cleaner once-in-awhile!

Steve can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Kansas SBA offers federal contracting training day at FHSU

SBA 

Upcoming workshops about federal contracting programs on Sept. 5 at the Kansas Small Business Development Center headquartered at Fort Hays State University.  Attend the session that applies to your business.

Woman Owned Small Business (WOSB) Federal Contracting Program:

The woman owned small business federal contracting program authorizes contracting officers to set aside certain federal contracts for eligible women & economically disadvantaged women-owned small businesses. Register online by clicking HERE!

    8:00 – 8:15     REGISTRATION

    8:15 – 8:30     KANSAS SBDC and GROW HAYS

    8:30 – 10:00   WOSB/EDWOSB FEDERAL CONTRACTING PROGRAM

SBA 8(a) Business Development Program:

The 8(a) Program is a nine year program designed to assist eligible socially and economically disadvantaged individuals grow and succeed in their business ventures through various means of support.  Certified 8(a) firms are considered small disadvantaged concerns for federal contracting purposes. Register online by clicking HERE!

  10:00 – 10:15   REGISTRATION

  10:15 – 10:30   KANSAS SBDC and GROW HAYS

  10:30 – 11:45   IS THE 8(A) PROGRAM RIGHT FOR YOUR BUSINESS?

 All Small Mentor Protégé Program:

The All Small Mentor Protégé Program helps small businesses access Federal contracts by fostering private-sector relationships between approved small business mentors and protégés. Register online by clicking HERE!

  1:15–  1:30      REGISTRATION

  1:30 – 1:45      KANSAS SBDC and GROW HAYS

  1:45 – 3:15      ALL SMALL MENTOR PROTÉGÉ PROGRAM

Presenters: Teri L. Taylor, SBA Business Development Specialist; and a representative from the Kansas SBDC at Fort Hays State University

Hays Symphony season opener stars one of world’s greatest pianists

Sadikov
By RUTH FIRESTONE
Hays music lover

As the 2018-19 concert season begins, excitement is running high among the members and friends of the Hays Symphony Orchestra. Fresh from a hugely successful concert at the Los Angeles Hollywood Bowl, pianist Behzod Abduraimov will perform the “Piano Concerto in A minor,” opus 16 by Edvard Grieg with the Hays Symphony, conducted by music director Shah Sadikov.

The concert, Saturday, Sept. 8, in the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center (7 p.m. for an introductory talk by Sadikov, 7:30 p.m. for the concert) is free and open to the public, but tickets are required. Tickets are available at the Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Downtown Hays Development Corporation, in the lobby 30 minutes before the performance, and on the new Hays Symphony website (www.hayssymphony.org).

Even for the most jaded audiences, the concerto, one of the most popular works in concerto literature, never fails to raise goose bumps where it is dramatic and sighs of pleasure where it is calm and melodious.

Born in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, Abduraimov has performed throughout Europe and Asia, as well as with major U.S. symphony orchestras. Critics praise him unanimously. Rick Schultz, writing in the Los Angeles “Arts and Culture Newsletter,” calls him, “One of the finest musicians of his generation.” Tony Frankel says, Abduraimov “combines superlative technique with energetic experimentation, soul, and discovery” (“Music and Theater in Los Angeles”).

In addition to the Grieg concerto, the orchestra will perform several shorter pieces that never fail to please – Felix Mendelssohn’s lyric “Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage,” Bela Bartok’s “Concerto for Orchestra,” and Claude Debussy’s “Prelude a l’apres-midi d’un faune” (“Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun”).

Just in case you’d like to know – this is the prelude, not the longer ballet, and a faun is a mythological being, half man and half goat, not a baby deer.

A post-concert reception, sponsored by Werth Wealth Management, will give the audience and musicians a chance to mingle over some lavish refreshments.

Many thanks for the generous donations that make this concert possible go to Auto World (Dick and Kay Werth) and NAVO, an Overland Park organization of international artists dedicated to encourage world-class performances in the Midwest region.

So, for an evening of good music, fun, and refreshments, mark your calendar for 7 p.m. Sept. 8 in Beach/Schmidt.

KHP: Body found on Kan. highway was hit-and-run victim

ALLEN COUNTY — Law enforcement found the body of a man on a Kansas highway Sunday.

Approximately location where authorities found Montgomery’s body -google map

The Kansas Highwway Patrol reported the body of Billy Lee Montgomery, 26, Springfield, Missouri, was found just before 2a.m. in the eastbound lane of US 54 just east of 3400th.

Authorities believe he was the victim of  a hit and run accident.

Montgomery’s body was transported to Countryside Funeral Home in Humbolt.

St. Francis, Ellis County officers among recent academy graduates

KU News Service

YODER — Fifty-three new law enforcement officers graduated from the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center on Aug. 10. University of Kansas Chancellor Douglas A. Girod was the speaker for the ceremony in KLETC’s Integrity Auditorium.

The new officers were members of the 251st basic training class at the center. Located one mile west and one mile south of Yoder, near Hutchinson, the center is a division of University of Kansas Professional & Continuing Education.

The graduates, who began their training April 30, represented 38 municipal, county and state law enforcement agencies from across Kansas.

Graduates receive certificates of course completion from KLETC and Kansas law enforcement certification from the Kansas Commission on Peace Officers’ Standards and Training, the state’s law enforcement licensing authority. The training course fulfills the state requirement for law enforcement training. Classroom lectures and hands-on applications help train officers to solve the increasingly complex problems they face in the line of duty.

Established by the Kansas Legislature in 1968, the center trains the majority of municipal, county and state law enforcement officers in Kansas and oversees the training of the remaining officers at seven authorized and certified academy programs operated by local law enforcement agencies and the Kansas Highway Patrol.

About 300 officers enroll annually in KLETC 14-week basic training programs. The center offers continuing education and specialized training to over 10,000 Kansas officers each year.

Graduates who granted permission to release their names are listed below by agency.

Cheyenne County
St. Francis Police Department; Makayla Kennedy; patrol officer; St. Francis

Ellis County
Ellis County Sheriff’s Department; Andrew Powers; deputy; Hays

Dave Says: Impress them!

Dave Ramsey
Dear Dave,
I just graduated from college recently. Is it a waste of time to apply for a job if you have a degree in the proper field, but no real work experience?

Daniel

Dear Daniel,
Absolutely not! The only sure-fire way to ensure you’ll miss out on a job is by not applying for the position.
Send a copy of your resumé to every job opportunity for which you have a reasonable chance of being hired. Then, when you get an interview, go in there with your head held high. Be articulate, enthusiastic, and carry yourself with purpose. Use your style, intelligence, education, and confidence to sell yourself and your ability to jump in, learn quickly, and get the job done.

I’ve met lots of people who say they have 20 years of experience. But in a lot of cases it’s more like one year of experience 20 times. That kind of “experience” is useless. I’ve also met many sharp, educated people without experience, but you can tell they’re the kind who will put their minds to work, think outside the box, and figure out a way to get the job done with excellence.

As an employer, if I’ve got a choice between the two, that’s the one I want on my team!

Dave Ramsey is CEO of Ramsey Solutions. He has authored seven best-selling books, including The Total Money Makeover. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 14 million listeners each week on 600 radio stations and multiple digital platforms. Follow Dave on the web at daveramsey.com and on Twitter at @DaveRamsey.

SCHROCK: Generation upon generation

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

A classic song from “Bye Bye Birdie” asks “Why can’t they be like we were, perfect in every way? What’s the matter with kids today?” If you read those lyrics with the tune in mind, you are definitely well on your way towards retirement. Most of today’s students not only do not recognize that parody of Elvis Presley, but they are also clueless about “My Fair Lady” and “West Side Story.”

Grieving over the young generation has a long history, going back to the Greeks and Romans. But the changes in culture are accelerating. The Zeitgeist or “spirit of the time” is changing more dramatically as technology, music and clothing styles evolve ever faster. So we classify students into generational groups.

The Silent Generation is the cohort of persons born before 1946 and after approximately 1928. They are now 72-90 years old. Most grew up in the Great Depression. They are frugal, hard-working and do not waste food. Surviving World War II produced loyalty. And the G.I. Bill provided returnees an education. They were optimistic and expected their children to live even better, just as they experienced a better life in post-War modernization.

The baby boomer generation was born between 1946 and 1964. Colleges and universities expanded—and in some cases overbuilt. A high school education came to be expected of most. Larger numbers attended college. From President Eisenhower through Kennedy, the Cold War was ever-present but the race to the moon inspired many Americans. A series of assassinations ended the optimism and SAT scores plummeted. Baby boomers are now in the midst of retiring.

Generation X or “Gen-X” was born between 1965 and 1976 (or some say 1961 to 1981). Unlike baby boomers, they are more likely to borrow money and are less certain that Social Security will be there when they retire. By this time, both parents had to work to maintain an average standard of living; thus many came home from school as “latchkey kids.” No longer sure that their future will be better than their past, they are portrayed as more pessimistic. Some pundits have labeled them the “slacker generation.”

Some describe a Generation Y or “Gen-Y” for those born between 1977 and 1984.

But the generation that came of age after the turn of the century were the “millennials.” Born from 1981 to 1996, they are now 22-37 years old. Millennials are the first generation to grow up with the internet and smart phones. Nearly half are still living at home with their parents. If they marry, it is usually later in life. For many millennial boys, videogame addiction resulted in higher school dropout rates and extensive lack of employment.

The young students attending college this fall are the first wave of “post-millennials” or Generation Z. They were born between the late 1990s through 2010. While many remain “technology-addicted,” they appear to be aware of how isolating digital media can be and prefer to communicate face-to-face.

For over two decades, Beloit College issued an annual “mindset list” that described to professors the experience base of this year’s first-year college students—it will end after this year as a Beloit College product. It helped professors understand that these new students have always had a “phone” in hand that was both videogame and library. They have always had Wikipedia available and used emojis, etc. And Prius had always been on the road, etc.

To the teacher, whether K–12 or university level, understanding how students’ experience base is changing is critical to effective teaching. To communicate clearly and correctly requires common experiences that provide common meaning. When the next generation no longer shares experiences that were common among prior students, a teacher has to seek common ground through classroom discussion and exchanges, provide labs and field trips, and attempt to supplement the experiences lost to students immersed in a virtual or evolving world.

As a child, I remember the news reporting the death of the last Civil War child-soldier, who had lived past 100. Today’s students would now think of World War I in the same way. Boy, do I feel old!

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

First Amendment: Can Brennan make a free speech case? Yes, to ‘us’

Gene Policinski
Does former CIA director John Brennan have a First Amendment case against President Trump for pulling Brennan’s national security clearance?

Definitely — in the court of public opinion, if not automatically in a court of law.

Our freedom of speech is most protected when we chose to speak out on matters of public concern; in short, when we join in “political speech.” We are protected against government censorship in advance of such speech, and from government retaliation afterwards, and even — though least often considered — also protected against being forced to speak if we chose not to.

So when Trump yanked Brennan’s clearance, while also threatening to do the same to about a dozen other former or current government officials, we all should view this with concern — the nonpartisan kind of concern, about constitutional rights, as tough as that may be to do in these times.

Clearly, Brennan is a vocal, frequent critic of Trump’s conduct in office: after Trump participated in July in a joint press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Brennan said Trump’s failure to vigorously confront Putin over Russian meddling in U.S. elections was “nothing less than treasonous” and “giving aid and comfort to the enemy.”

Brennan often appears on NBC and MSNBC — frequent targets of Trump’s criticism of the news media as “fake news” — where he is a paid contributor, and also he offers commentary in The New York Times and other cable and print news outlets.

From a First Amendment standpoint, none of those “credentials” would automatically justify government retaliation — paid, unpaid, on network TV or in a letter to a friend, political ally or foe, free speech protection still applies. And as yet, there’s no claim from the White House of some action by Brennan that would historically justify pulling his access, such as revealing classified information.

The White House has made some effort to counter free speech concerns. What Trump termed as Brennan’s “increasingly frenzied commentary” feeds into “the very aim of our adversaries which is to sow division and chaos,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said a day after the revocation — adding that such actions were “inconsistent” with holding a national security clearance.

But the president later said in a Wall Street Journal interview that, “Mr. Brennan was among those he held responsible for the investigation…looking into whether there was collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin” — which would seem to place things back into the area of attempt to chill the speech of those who would question or oppose him.

Such a flap over national security clearances is apparently unprecedented — but attempts by government to censor contrary speech are not. From action against war protesters to attempts to stifle the free speech and free press rights of civil rights organizations and figures, the First Amendment has repeatedly had to shield those whom government officials would attempt to stifle or frighten into silence.

Over the years, the First Amendment’s protection of free speech has been buttressed by a host of U.S. Supreme Court decisions dealing with direct and indirect challenges, from protests involving the U.S. flag, to Civil Rights era attempts to silence the NAACP through a demand for its membership lists, to providing protection even for inadvertent errors in comments about public officials and public figures.

It was in the seminal 1964 Supreme Court decision involving public figures, New York Times v. Sullivan that — in a bit of name-related irony — the late Justice William J. Brennan wrote of a “profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust and wide-open, that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on the government and public officials.”

Armed with those words, Trump’s action would seem to be out of order — at least in the court of public opinion. But in the actual courts, great deference is generally given to the President absent some specific constitutional restraint. As an example, see the courts’ reluctance earlier this year to limit Trump’s restrictive immigration regulations.

The aforementioned “division and chaos” rationale might well be enough for a court to turn back a legal challenge by Brennan — though if Trump extends the revocations to others without more justification than a link to the Russian election investigation, it would seem more vendetta than vetting.

Yes, Brennan has not been silenced by losing his clearance. But others less well off or more dependent on such clearances to continue in government jobs or work with outside contractors may well decide not to speak for fear of such “punishment.”

Our nation’s founders built into the Bill of Rights such unprecedented protection for free speech, because they had first-hand experience with a system stacked to prevent and punish critics of the Crown.

Those founders saw — as did Justice Brennan two centuries later — the value to the nation and to democracy of unrestrained debate and discourse on public issues in what has come to be called “the marketplace of ideas.”

Clearly, we need to hear from Trump, Brennan and former and current officials and government staffers on matters that are controversial. Let the comments — and tweets — fly, for us all to hear.

A good approach in the era of King George, and no less valuable in the time of Trump.

Gene Policinski is president and chief operating officer of the Freedom Forum Institute. He can be reached at [email protected], or follow him on Twitter at @genefac.

Dog lost after mountain crash that killed Kan. woman found safe

CHAFREE COUNTY, Colo. (AP) — A dog that survived almost three weeks in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains after being thrown from a vehicle in a fatal crash has been reunited with its family.

Bentley -Image courtesy Jennifer Orr

The year-old canine — a golden-doodle named Bentley — was lost when the vehicle it was traveling in slid off the edge of a mountain road west of Pueblo and plunged 600 feet down an incline on Aug. 7.

The crash killed Jennifer Orr of Wichita, Kansas and seriously injured her 21-year-old daughter, Samantha.

Samantha Orr returned to the crash scene after being released from the hospital.

Orr and others spotted Bentley early Saturday and captured on video the moment when they were able to lure the animal in with food and a toy.

The dog was malnourished and dehydrated but otherwise fine.

————

CHAFFEE COUNTY, CO — A Kansas woman died in an accident Tuesday in Chaffee County Colorado.

Google map

Sheriff John Spezze said a 2014 Jeep Wrangler driven by Jennifer Orr, 43, Wichita, was traveling on Iron Chest Road from CR 295 when it fell 600 feet down the mountain.

The jeep was at an elevation of over 11,000 feet at the time of the accident, according to Speezze.

Orr was pronounced dead at the scene.  A helicopter transported  Orr’s daughter who was passenger in the vehicle to a hospital in Pueblo.

Kipnis’ inside-the-park HR sends Indians past Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Jason Kipnis hit an inside-the-park homer and finished with four RBIs, Edwin Encarnacion added a two-run shot and the Cleveland Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 12-5 Sunday to snap a four-game skid.

Kipnis rounded the bases for his two-run homer in the ninth inning, when his high flyball to right field bounced off the top of the wall and into no-man’s land. It was his second career inside-the-park job and the second for the Indians this year.

Shane Bieber (8-2) allowed four runs for Cleveland on homers by Whit Merrifield, Salvador Perez and Lucas Duda. He departed after allowing six hits and striking out seven in 5 1/3 innings.

The AL Central-leading Indians improved to 10-1 this season when facing a series sweep.

Right-hander Jorge Lopez (0-4) allowed five runs, all in the fourth inning, on five hits and three walks for Kansas City. He was lifted after throwing 79 pitches in just four innings.

The Royals, who had snapped their own five-game skid Friday night, looked as if they’d keep their momentum going when Merrifield took Bieber deep to left field leading off the game.

It was his fifth career leadoff homer and second this year.

But the Indians answered with their big fourth inning, when six consecutive batters reached on four hits and a pair of walks. And after Perez went deep in the bottom half, the Indians added two more runs on Lindor’s single with two outs in the sixth inning to add to their cushion.

Encarnacion continued the offensive outburst – which came after the Indians were held to one run on five hits on Saturday night – when he took Royals reliever Jake Newberry deep in the eighth.

O’HEARN IN LF

Royals 1B/DH Ryan O’Hearn got the start in left field, the first time he’s played the outfield in the big leagues. O’Hearn played 13 games there at Triple-A Omaha this season, and manager Ned Yost said the move was designed to “find a way to keep his bat in there.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Indians: RHP Cody Anderson (Tommy John surgery) struck out two in a scoreless inning Saturday night for the club’s Arizona League team. It was his first game since September 2016. “No red flags or anything,” manager Terry Francona said. … OF Brandon Guyer is getting a couple days off after getting hit where the foot meets the ankle, or as Francona called it, the “fankle.”

Royals: RHP Ian Kennedy (left oblique strain) threw 60 pitches last Friday without any problems and expects to make a rehab start Wednesday, Yost said. … OF Jorge Soler (fractured left toe) will begin a rehab assignment in the next couple of days, but even then he is unlikely to play in the outfield. “I don’t think so,” Yost said. “DH him some, give him some at-bats, make sure he’s ready to go for spring training, which he will be.”

UP NEXT

The Indians and Royals will both take Monday off before beginning their next series. Cleveland is back home to face Minnesota with Carlos Carrasco (15-7, 3.55 ERA) on the mound, and Kansas City begins a five-game trip to Detroit and Baltimore with Jakob Junis (6-12, 4.70 ERA) getting the first start.

FHSU volleyball starts season 4-0 at Aggies Challenge

GOODWELL, Okla. – Fort Hays State remained perfect on the season with a pair of wins on Saturday (Aug. 25) at the Aggies Challenge, hosted by Oklahoma-Panhandle State. The Tigers defeated University of St. Thomas (Texas) 3-1 in their first match before sweeping University of the Southwest in the nightcap.

Fort Hays State 3, St. Thomas (Texas) 1 (25-22, 21-25, 25-20, 25-16)
Fort Hays State needed four sets to turn away the University of St. Thomas (Texas). The Tigers jumped out of the gates with a 25-22 win in the first set before dropping the second set by four. FHSU regrouped and took control with set wins of five and nine points to close out the match.

Azlyn Cassaday produced a new career high in kills with 20, hitting .204 for the match. Isabelle Reynolds and Tatum Bartels provided efficiency on offense. Reynolds produced 16 kills with a .394 hitting percentage, while Bartels added nine kills and four blocks with a .333 hitting percentage. Morgan West was right behind Bartels with eight kills.

Bre Becker produced 30 assists for the Tiger offense, while Amirah Bentley shared the distribution duties with 22 assists. Abbie Hayes averaged six digs per set to anchor the Tiger defensive effort, while Taylor White added 11 digs and Abby Groth had 10. The Tigers had 17 more digs than UST, holding a 68-51 edge in that category.

A 5-0 run by the Tigers in the first set, highlighted by a pair of service aces from Becker and kills from Reynolds and West, pushed the Tigers out to a 14-9 lead. St. Thomas closed the FHSU lead to one point three times, but a pair of kills from Bartels closed out the set. The Tigers produced a .448 hitting percentage in the opening set.

A rash of four straight attacking errors into the St. Thomas block put the Tigers down by three early. The Tigers knotted the score up at 14-14 with a 5-1 run and the remainder of the set was close until the Celts closed out the frame with a 3-0 run on Tiger mistakes (one bad set and two attack errors).

The Tigers used a 4-0 burst in the third set to push a two-point lead to six points. The Tigers coasted to a five-point win in the set thanks to a .317 hitting percentage in the set.

FHSU closed out the match by holding UST to a -.097 hitting percentage in the final set, using blocks to generate four points. A 7-0 run for the Tigers broke a 7-7 tie and they never looked back, leading by as many as 10 before the final margin settled at nine.

Bresha Orange led UST in kills with 13, while Brooke Garcia added 10. Hannah Westerlage had 22 assists and Kelsie Walker added 17. Libero Lauren Fernandez-Miller led the Celts in digs with 17.

Fort Hays State 3, University of the Southwest 0 (25-18, 25-6, 25-21)
Fort Hays State remained perfect on the season with a three-set win over University of the Southwest in its final match of the Aggies Challenge in Goodwell, Okla. The Tigers cruised to a 2-0 lead before having to make a comeback from seven points down in the third set to win 25-21 and sweep the match.

Ashley Webb and Kayla Vitztum led the Tigers with nine kills each, while Webb added four blocks for the match. Amirah Bentley (18) and Bre Becker (17) shared the assister role, while Abbie Hayes averaged six digs for the second straight match to finish with 18.

The Tigers held a steady lead all throughout the first set to eventually win by seven points, then dominated the second set with a 25-6 win. In the second set, the Tigers dominated with a .647 hitting percentage, while holding the Mustangs to -.208.

In the third set, the Tigers rallied from an 18-11 deficit to win the third set. Down 21-17, the Tigers reeled off the final eight points of the set to sweep the match. The final seven points came on Taylor White’s serve. Vitztum was a catalyst in the final push, putting down three kills in the Tigers’ run.

Lacey Clutts led the Mustangs with nine kills. Miranda Tapia had 17 assists and Autumn Lopez had a team-high 11 digs.

The Tigers return to action next weekend at the Augustana Invitational in Sioux Falls, S.D. FHSU starts the tournament with Black Hills State University on August 31 at 9 am.

Hot, windy Monday

Today Sunny, with a high near 99. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 17 to 24 mph.

TonightMostly clear, with a low around 72. South wind 11 to 15 mph.

Tuesday Mostly sunny, with a high near 84. West southwest wind 9 to 15 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Tuesday Night A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 60. North northeast wind 8 to 14 mph.

Wednesday Sunny, with a high near 81. North northeast wind around 8 mph becoming east in the afternoon.
Wednesday NightA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.

ThursdayMostly sunny, with a high near 91.

Dianne C. Matreci

Dianne C. Matreci, 69, Hays, Kansas died Friday, August 24, 2018, at Via Christi Village Care Center in Hays, Kansas.

Services are pending at Clines-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601.

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