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Dale Frederick Suter

Dale Frederick Suter, 83, of Oakley, died Monday, November 19, 2018, at his home. He was born April 15, 1935, in Gove County, KS, to Ray and Elizabeth (Frederick) Suter. On November 4, 1959, he married Marie Townsend. Dale was a lifetime farmer and machinist. In the early 70’s he worked as a machinist for Struckhoff and Son’s. In 1977 he started Dale’s Machinery and Repair, which he sold in 1982. In 1988 he moved his shop to the farm and continued working until 2016. Dale had served on the Grinnell School Board. In his spare time, he enjoyed building model airplanes, hunting, fishing, camping and hunting coyotes. Most of all he loved spending time with kids.

Dale was preceded in death by his parents and sisters, Evelyn (Ike) Eiserzimmer and Helen (Duard) Goble.

He is survived by his wife, Marie, of the home; children, Ray Suter, Alan (Yolanda) Suter, Sharlene (Brian) Williams and Mark (Marisa) Suter; 10 grandchildren, Brett (Regina) Suter, Brook (Ethan) Plummer, Paige Suter, Abby Suter, Ranae (Jerome) Nelsen, Brian (Kristi) Suter, Levi (Becky) Jones, Jessica (Brandon) Ashford, Alek Suter and Audri Suter and 7 great grandchildren.

Cremation was chosen, the family will receive friends from 5-7:00 p.m. Friday, November23, 2018, at Baalmann Mortuary, Oakley. Memorial Service is 10:00 a.m. Saturday, November 24, 2018, also at the Mortuary. Inurnment will take place in the Immaculate Conception Cemetery, Grinnell, KS. Memorials are suggested to the local Norman Yardley Cancer Fund, in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 204, Oakley, KS 67748. For condolences or information visit www.baalmannmortuary.com

Roger Wayne Ausmus

Roger Wayne Ausmus went to be with the Lord on November 16, 2018 at the Logan County Hospital in Oakley. He was born April 15, 1939 in Holcomb, KS in their home to Fred and Anna (Hadley) Ausmus.

Roger attended school in Garden City, Russell Springs and Winona, but had to drop out his senior year to help run the farm after his mother had a heart attack. He married Margie Denning on June 6, 1959.

He helped his father run his feed yard and farm from the age of 9. His parents encouraged him to start living his dreams, so he drove cattle truck for Earl & Bob Gates. In 1966, Roger and Margie went to Topeka in a thundersnow to purchase Gates’ trucking authority. He trucked for Les Keller (late, 2015) and many others hauling cattle, grain, hay, and other commodities. In 1974 he ordered a new Freightliner Cabover. Ausmus and Son, Incorporated was formed in 1978 and he dispatched Glen Repshire, Larry Thacker, Terry Thrasher and others.

Roger was an honest, hardworking farmer and truck driver known by everyone in the area. He was a jack of all trades and enjoyed helping Dewey Council, Jr. (late, 2000) with his carpentry. He spent many hours with Bob Bartell (late, 2001) visiting and mechanicing. Ernie Denning (late, 1991) spent his vacation helping Roger with wheat harvest. He mentored many nephews, friends, and grandsons. If Roger told you something, then it was true. He said, “If you aren’t going to tell the truth, don’t tell me anything.”

At the same time they were in Topeka buying the trucking authority Margie went to file for adoption and at Christmas time they had their Christmas Angel, Melissa. Immediately they put in for another adoption and July 1968 they had a happy sweet baby boy, Randy. Five months later Marge found out she was pregnant, and Michele was born in March 1970.

He was preceded in death by his parents: an infant son; brothers Glen, Al and Richard and sisters Dorothy Peitz and Norma Straub.

He is survived by his wife, Margie, of the home; children Melissa (Eugene) Haffner, Overland Park, KS, Randy Ausmus, Phoenix, AZ and Michele (Larry) Werth, Brewster, KS; sister, Beth Lamb-Duff; grandchildren, Wyatt (Alexis) Werth and Layton Werth and Chase, Caden and Cole Haffner and great grandchildren, Brenna and Everly Werth and Maycee Williams.

Roger was a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles in Oakley, then WaKeeney. He served on the Winona City Council. Roger loved KU Basketball, his family and children.

Visitation is 5-7:00 p.m. Tuesday, November 20, 2018, at the Winona United Methodist Church and 9:00am until service on Wednesday. Funeral Service is 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, November 21, 2018, also at the church. Interment will take place at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 21, 2018 at St. Joseph Cemetery, Oakley. Memorials are suggested to Winona Chamber of Commerce or Logan County EMS -Winona in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 204, Oakley, KS 67748. For condolences or information visit www.baalmannmortuary.com

Family of Kansas teen killed in wreck outside Arrowhead sues

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The family of a teen who was killed in a crash with an off-duty officer outside the stadium where the Kansas City Chiefs play has filed a wrongful death lawsuit.

The Kansas City Star reports that the lawsuit was filed in Jackson County Circuit Court against Terrell Watkins. He was driving a police van to an off-duty security assignment at Arrowhead Stadium in heavy pregame traffic last month when he slammed into the back of a car. The crash killed the car’s driver, 17-year-old Chandan Rajanna of Overland Park and seriously hurt the teen’s father and older sister.

Watkins isn’t identified in the lawsuit as a police officer, but police officials previously said that an officer was involved in the fatal wreck. Watkins doesn’t have a listed phone number.

Argument at Chicago hospital erupts into deadly shooting

Wikipedia Commons
By AMANDA SEITZ and DON BABWIN
Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) — An argument outside a Chicago hospital turned deadly when a man pulled out a gun and killed an emergency room doctor whom he knew, then ran into the hospital and fatally shot a pharmacy resident and a police officer, authorities said.

The attacker, Juan Lopez, also died Monday but it was not clear if he took his own life or was killed by police at Mercy Hospital on the city’s South Side, Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said.

Chicago “lost a doctor, pharmaceutical assistant and a police officer, all going about their day, all doing what they loved,” Mayor Rahm Emanuel said, fighting back tears. “This just tears at the soul of our city. It is the face and a consequence of evil.”

Mercy Hospital said the staff who died were Tamara O’Neal, 38, an emergency room physician who never worked on Sunday because of her religious faith, and Dayna Less, 25, a first year pharmacy resident who had recently graduated from Purdue University.

The slain officer was identified as Samuel Jimenez, 28, who joined the department in February 2017 and had recently completed his probationary period, Johnson said. Police said he was married and the father of three children.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi described the shooting as a “domestic-related active shooter incident,” but provided no details about the relationship between the two.

Lopez, 32, and O’Neal had been arguing in the hospital parking lot. When a friend of O’Neal tried to intervene, “the offender lifted up his shirt and displayed a handgun,” Johnson said.

The friend ran into the hospital to call for help, and the gunfire began seconds later. After O’Neal fell to the ground, Lopez “stood over her and shot her three more times,” a witness named James Gray told reporters.

When officers arrived, the suspect fired at their squad car then ran inside the hospital. The police gave chase.

Inside the medical center, Lopez exchanged fire with officers and “shot a poor woman who just came off the elevator” before he was killed, Johnson said, referring to pharmaceutical assistant Less.

“We just don’t know how much damage he was prepared to do,” Johnson said, adding that Less “had nothing to do with nothing.”

Jennifer Eldridge was working in a hospital pharmacy when she heard three or four shots that seemed to come from outside. Within seconds, she barricaded the door, as called for in the building’s active shooter drills. Then there were six or seven more shots that sounded much closer, just outside the door.

“I could tell he was now inside the lobby. There was screaming,” she recalled.

The door jiggled, which Eldridge believed was the shooter trying to get in. Some 15 minutes later, she estimated, a SWAT team officer knocked at the door, came inside and led her away. She looked down and saw blood on the floor but no bodies.

“It may have been 15 minutes, but it seemed like an eternity,” she said.

Maria Correa hid under a desk, clutching her 4-month-old son, Angel, while the violence unfolded. Correa was in the waiting area of the hospital for her mother-in-law’s doctor appointment when a hospital employee told them to lock themselves in offices.

She lost track of how many shots she heard while under the desk “trying to protect her son” for 10 to 15 minutes.

“They were the worst minutes of our lives,” Correa said.

The death of Jimenez comes nine months after another member of the Chicago Police Department, Cmdr. Paul Bauer, was fatally shot while pursuing a suspect in the Loop business district.

Mercy has a rich history as the city’s first chartered hospital. It began in 1852, when the Sisters of Mercy religious group converted a rooming house. During the Civil War, the hospital treated both Union soldiers and Confederate prisoners of war, according to its website.

TMP-M cheerleaders take sixth at state competition

Back row: Morgan Olmsted, Emma Schmidt, Addie Roth, Kayle Casper, Avin Inlow, Hannah Flinn, Avery Werth, Izzy Peine Front row: Kali Hagans, Hayli Meier, Kamryn Hudsonpillar, Grace Pope, Makinsey Schlautman Courtesy photo

TOPEKA — Thomas More Prep-Marian cheerleaders competed Saturday, Nov. 17, in Topeka for State Cheer Competition.

The cheerleaders were judged on crowd leading cheer, band dance and fight song. TMP-Mcheerleaders made it to the final round and placed 6th place in 3A division.

The squad is coached by Denise Weigel and assistant coach Maggie Darnell

— Submitted

Judge weighs Somali immigrants’ testimony in bomb plot case

By ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press

WICHITA — A federal judge didn’t immediately rule Monday on whether to bar Somali immigrants from testifying at the sentencing of three men convicted of plotting to bomb the Kansas apartment complex where the immigrants lived, but he said he couldn’t recall ever denying someone that right.

U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren heard arguments from attorneys for three militia members who also were convicted of planning to bomb a mosque in Garden City, a meatpacking town in western Kansas that is among the most ethnically diverse in the state.

The men were scheduled to be sentenced this week, but the hearing was derailed by their request to block 20 short videos of testimony that the government wants to play.

Defense attorney Michael Shultz said the victim impact statements shouldn’t be allowed because none of the immigrants was hurt in the plot. Prosecutor Mary Hahn argued that harm to the community should be considered.

“They provide insight to the long-lasting impact of this crime,” Hahn said, adding that the men have tried to minimize the impact of their crimes as “mere words.”

The judge said he would issue decision later, but commented during the hearing: “I can’t recall that I have ever in a sentencing hearing denied a person who wanted to be heard the right to be heard.”

A federal jury in April convicted Patrick Stein, Gavin Wright and Curtis Allen of conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction and conspiracy against civil rights. Wright was also found guilty of lying to the FBI.

The attack, planned for the day after the 2016 general election, was thwarted by another member of the group who tipped off authorities about escalating threats of violence.

Judge bars U.S. from enforcing Trump asylum ban

By NOMAAN MERCHANT
Associated Press

HOUSTON (AP) — A federal judge barred the Trump administration from refusing asylum to immigrants who cross the southern border illegally.

President Donald Trump issued a proclamation on Nov. 9 that said anyone who crossed the southern border between official ports of entry would be ineligible for asylum. As the first of several caravans of migrants have started arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border, Trump said an asylum ban was necessary to stop what he’s attacked as a national security threat.

But in his ruling Monday, U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar agreed with legal groups that immediately sued, arguing that U.S. immigration law clearly allows someone to seek asylum even if they enter the country between official ports of entry.

“Whatever the scope of the President’s authority, he may not rewrite the immigration laws to impose a condition that Congress has expressly forbidden,” said Tigar, a nominee of former President Barack Obama.
The Department of Homeland Security did not immediately comment on the ruling, which will remain in effect for one month barring an appeal. In issuing the ban, Trump used the same powers he used last year to impose a travel ban that was ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court.

If enforced, the ban would potentially make it harder for thousands of people to avoid deportation. DHS estimates around 70,000 people a year claim asylum between official ports of entry. But Tigar’s ruling notes that federal law says someone may seek asylum if they have arrived in the United States, “whether or not at a designated port of arrival.”

“Individuals are entitled to asylum if they cross between ports of entry,” said Baher Azmy, a lawyer for the Center for Constitutional Rights, which sued the government alongside the American Civil Liberties Union. “It couldn’t be clearer.”

Around 3,000 people from the first of the caravans have arrived in Tijuana, Mexico, across the border from San Diego, California. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Monday that it closed off northbound traffic for several hours at the San Ysidro crossing. It has also installed movable, wire-topped barriers, apparently to stop a potential mass rush of people.

As of Monday, 107 people detained between official crossings have sought asylum since Trump’s order went into effect, according to DHS, which oversees Customs and Border Protection. Officials didn’t say whether those people’s cases were still progressing through other, more difficult avenues left to them after the proclamation.

DHS has said it wants asylum seekers at the southern border to appear at an official border crossing. But many border crossings such as San Ysidro already have long wait times. People are often forced to wait in shelters or outdoor camps on the Mexican side, sometimes for weeks.

ACLU lawyer Lee Gelernt said that some people seeking asylum cross between official ports because “they’re in real danger,” either in their countries of origin or in Mexico.

“We don’t condone people entering between ports of entry, but Congress has made the decision that if they do, they still need to be allowed to apply for asylum,” he said.

Sondra J. Horesky

Norton – Sondra J. Horesky, 65, passed away Monday, November 19, 2018 at her home in Norton.

Arrangements are pending with All Faiths Funeral Chapel.

Joetta B. Nevins

Joetta B. Nevins, age 85, died on Friday, November 16, 2018, surrounded by family at Hays Medical Center, Hays, Kansas.

From her birth in Graham County, Kansas on November 19, 1932 to her death on Friday, she nourished people around her with love, support and a caring heart.

Joetta was a lifelong resident of Graham County. She was born on a farm near Nicodemus, Kansas to Andrew and Cordelia (VanDuvall) Alexander and was one of 10 children. She graduated from Bogue, Kansas high school and worked at the Hill City airport. As a child she loved to ride horses on her family’s farm. She enjoyed farming and was a sports enthusiast. As a young lady, she participated in sports such as basketball, softball, and bowling. Joetta won numerous state championship bowling titles. She was a lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan and loved to converse with her family and friends about her favorite team.

In 1953, she married her husband, Leroy Nevins. To that marriage were born: Eric, Rhea, Janille and Jon.
She is preceded in death by her husband, Leroy; her parents; 5 sisters, and 2 brothers.

Left to mourn her passing are her four children: Eric Nevins and Rhea Darnell both of Hill City, Janille Edwards of Salina, Jon C. Nevins of Overland Park; seven grandchildren; ten great grandchildren; three great great-grandchildren; two sisters: Naomi Hurst of Denver, Colorado; Janille Edwards of Salina, Kansas and many nieces and nephews.

She was a wonderful mother and grandmother. She was loved dearly by all of her family and friends and will be greatly missed.

Click HERE for service details.

Ellis County churches will host their 11th Thanksgiving Day Feast

By C.D. DESALVO
Hays Post

For more than 20 years, the annual Thanksgiving Day Feast has been a public event put on locally to provide a Thanksgiving for those who otherwise would not have one. This is the 11th year the Ellis County Ministerial Alliance is sponsoring the event.

The Community Thanksgiving Feast will be Thursday at The Rose Garden Banquet Hall, 2350 E. Eighth. A meal will be served from noon until 1:30 p.m., and everyone is invited — no reservations needed. Those interested in volunteering can sign up by calling First Call For Help (785) 623-2800 or visiting www.firstcallelliscounty.com.

Delivery of meals to shut-ins also can be arranged by calling First Call for Help. Meals will be delivered between 11:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Transportation to the dinner is provided by Access, and reservations must be made by noon Wednesday. Access can be reached at (785) 628-1052.

Tax deductible donations can be sent to: ECMA, PO Box 173, Hays, KS 67601.

Pastor Celeste Lasich of the Hays Presbyterian Church and Linda Mills, director of First Call for Help, were on the KAYS Eagle Morning Show to talk about the Thanksgiving Day Feast, what’s on the menu, what goes into planning this event, and more:

 

City commission meeting tonight with short agenda

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The Hays city commission will meet Tue., Nov. 20 rather than Thursday due to the Thanksgiving holiday.

Kim Rupp, director of finance, will present the October 2018 financial statement.

Commissioners will then consider bids for 26 areas of repair on sewer lines primarily located in the older sections of town.  M&D Excavating, Hays, presented the lowest bid of $198,380.

The complete agenda is available here.

The meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. in Hays City Hall, 1507 Main.

 

HAWVER: Hineman could see opposition from right for leadership post

Martin Hawver

Almost eerily quiet; this Thanksgiving week the Statehouse is going to be nearly empty, no interim committees meeting to thrash out possible legislation for the upcoming session, not even freshly elected legislators likely to be wandering the halls wondering where their offices are going to be.

Of course, nobody has won anything until the State Canvass Board meets later this month to certify that those election results are official, that the county officials counted right, that the candidates who were named winners in their local courthouses get the final OK in the Kansas Secretary of State’s office.

But pending that Topeka stamp of approval, there are still going to be 125 members of the Kansas House, and at least 27 of them are new, or at least relatively new (some served earlier terms, quit or were defeated, and came back). Five of those new or relatively new faces are Democrats, 22 are Republicans. A recount out in Hays will determine if Rep. Eber Phelps, D-Hays, or Republican Barbara Wasinger, Hays, wins the vote, which could change the number of new faces.

If Wasinger wins, the ratio stays at the current 85 Republicans, 40 Democrats. If Phelps wins, that makes it 84 Republicans, 41 Democrats. Not a “blue wave” in the House of Representatives.

That eerie quiet in the Statehouse is going to be offset by what will be hot phone lines, emails and voice messages between House members who will be campaigning within their party for leadership offices.

Now, everyone knows that the big job, the most powerful job in the Kansas House, is the Speaker. He/she with the help of the House Majority Leader decide what is going to be debated, and when.

That top job appears to be locked up by current Speaker Ron Ryckman, R-Olathe, who doesn’t have any serious opposition for the post within his party.

House Minority Leader Jim Ward, D-Wichita, may see a scrap for his post, largely because it doesn’t appear that he’s been able to increase Democrat numbers in the chamber, which is considered a major responsibility.

Everything else? Well, look for a GOP scrap over the No. 2 job in the chamber, Majority Leader. It’s the Majority Leader, moderate Republican Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, who is facing at least two conservative Republicans who hope to build on the shift to the right of the House GOP caucus.

Rep. Don Hineman, R-Dighton, 118th Dist.

It’s that under-the-sheets campaigning that will to a large degree determine whether Democrat Gov.-elect (now Senator) Laura Kelly, Topeka, gets much of her budget and legislative agenda approved.

And that, again, is where the leadership of the House becomes a key. That House leadership appoints members to committees which will not only come up with their own bills but hold hearings on Kelly-proposed bills.

Don’t like the Kelly bill? Just have the Majority Leader send it to a committee that will knock it down or amend it. That’s why the power to name Republican members of committees is almost thermonuclear. The House party breakdown means 23-member committees are 16 Republican/7 Democrat; 17-member committees are 12 Republican/5 Democrats, and so-on,

So how does a fresh-faced new legislator who doesn’t even know where all the Statehouse bathrooms are get a flashy committee assignment, say, Appropriations or Tax or Commerce or Federal and State Affairs? How about pledging to vote for a member of leadership, a little tradeoff and the first real use of a freshman’s power.

Democrats? They’ll make their own committee assignments, but not with the leverage that the Republican committee assignments carry.

Wonder what the upcoming session is going to look like? Wait for the leadership races to trickle down to committee assignments.

We’ll see…

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

SCHLAGECK: Protect and enhance

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

There’s an old saying that goes something like this: Sometimes you must look back on where you’ve been to know where you’re going. Being an ardent student of history, I believe it definitely has its place in our society today.

Whenever I take a road trip across Kansas or some other destination across our great land, I often stop along the way to read historical markers. They include details about battles, pestilence and devastation as well as discovery, success and progress.

When Mom and Dad were alive, we sometimes visited cemeteries in rural Kansas and Missouri to pay homage to relatives and friends. Below the headstones rested the remains of men in our family who spent their lives planting and harvesting behind sweating teams of horses, butchering hogs on bitterly cold days and teaching new sons about the soil.

Also, down there were the remains of women who collected eggs, washed clothes by hand, cooked skillets full of fried chicken and managed to raise and nurture a family under sometimes nearly impossible conditions.

They are the ones who wove the fabric that serves as the yardstick for our new and dynamic future. What happened with these early pioneers has a direct bearing on our present successes and failures.

One such winning story revolves around the strides agriculture and its people have made in the interests of conservation. Not everything that has happened in conservation can be limited to the last 20 or 30 years. Many of the innovations in conservation began taking shape in the years after the Dirty ‘30s, nearly 90 years ago.

Thousands of shelterbelts were planted in Kansas and other Great Plains states. After years of droughts and rain finally began falling again, ponds dotted the landscape holding this precious resource. Landowners learned to make the water walk and not run, conserving this water for livestock and sometimes for thirsty crops.

Terraces snaked their way across thousands of miles of farmland holding soil and water in place where it belonged. Soil stopping strip cropping created patterns and reduced wind erosion.

Slowly but surely conservation measures continued to slow the soil erosion gorilla that had stomped across the High Plains leaving in its wake gullies the size of automobiles, drifts of soil as high as fence posts, withered lifeless wheat and corn and starving livestock on barren pastures.

Yes, with knowledge, education, patience, understanding and hard work and Mother Nature’s ability to heal herself, the rich, fertile land recovered. Throughout this renaissance of the land, farmers and ranchers learned that stewardship of the soil, water and other resources is in the best interest of us all.

Without question, agriculture has yet to receive credit for what it has done to protect and to enhance the landscape and for its willingness to change and improve the few mistakes it has made.

It is important for all of us to understand what has happened in the past so we can place present events and future needs in their proper perspectives. To avoid doing so will blind us to involvement and participation in much larger efforts extending throughout a long span of time.

Incidentally, a new, modern twist may be nothing more than an old theme or something coming around after having gone around. After all, human history is comprised of human ideas. And incidentally, nearly all ideas are timeless, just waiting to be dusted off, reshaped and used again.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

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