An obituary and service details are pending with Enfield Funeral Home.
Month: November 2018
Elaine McCall
March 3, 1928 – November 18, 2018
An obituary is pending with Plumer Overlease Funeral Homes.
Click HERE for service details.
FHSU men’s soccer to face Barry University in national semifinal

FHSU Athletics
The No. 11 ranked Fort Hays State men’s soccer team has been tabbed as the No. 1 seed among the remaining final four teams in the NCAA Division II Men’s Soccer Championship. The Tigers will face the No. 20 ranked Barry University Buccaneers on Thursday (Nov. 29). Kickoff is slated for 10 a.m. CT (11 a.m. ET) inside Highmark Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pa.
The Tigers enter the match at 17-2-1 on the season, while the Buccaneers enter at 16-3-1 on the year. Fort Hays State is currently riding a 14-match winning streak and a 15-match unbeaten streak. The Tigers earned their spot in the National Semifinal match after defeating Ohio Valley, 2-0, on Saturday (Nov. 17), marking the first time in program history the Tigers have advanced this far in the NCAA tournament. Junior midfielder Moises Peralta provided the eventual game-winning goal in the 67th minute after Rogelio Lopez flipped the ball to Tobias Patino who then fed Peralta the ball for his first score of the season. Sophomore midfielder Mauricio Etcheverry tacked on another goal for the Tigers in the 89th frame of the contest. Prior to the victory over the Fighting Scots, Fort Hays State defeated No. 19 ranked Northeastern State, 3-1, in the Central Region Championship (Nov. 15) to earn their fourth region championship in the past five years.
Barry enters the match as the No. 4 seed in the National Semifinals. The Buccaneers upset No. 10 ranked Spring Hill College in the South Region Semifinal, 4-1. They then picked up another upset victory, this time over No. 24 ranked Lynn University in the South Region Championship. The Buccaneers and Fighting Knights were scoreless at the end of regulation and both overtime periods, before Barry defeated Lynn 4-2 in penalty kicks. In the National Quarterfinal against No. 8 ranked Lander University, the Buccaneers held off the Bearcats 2-1 to earn their third trip as one of the final four team in team history.
In the other National Semifinal contest, No. 2 seed Cal Poly Pomona University will face off with No. 3 seed West Chester University at 1 p.m. CT / 2 p.m. ET on November 29. The winners from each match will face each other in the NCAA Division II Men’s Soccer National Championship (Dec. 1).
Hays High JAG-K students explore careers at NCK Tech

NCKTECH
NCK Tech Hays campus recently hosted thirty students from the Jobs for America’s Graduates-Kansas (JAG-K) program at Hays High School.
According to Johnny Matlock, HHS career specialist, the program “partners with public schools to offer an elective class that provides academic and other positive support to ensure students earn their diploma.”
The students toured a variety of programs at NCK Tech including welding, nursing, electrical, culinary, business and carpentry.
The opportunity to show students hands-on application of programs is often key to their success.
The JAG-K program explores career opportunities and focuses on soft skills to prepare students for the next level, whether it be education, the workforce or the military.
An essential part of NCK Tech’s curriculum is focusing on job preparedness for all students. Soft skills are implemented into all programs of study.
Both Matlock and NCK Tech Student Services Coordinator Tiffany Fox commented on the success of the tour and the time students were able to spend exploring possible opportunities.
“The tour was a huge success on my end. Not only did I learn about a very good educational resource right here in Hays, but the tour sparked an interest in a career in several of my students,” said Matlock. “When students have a vision what they want their future to look like they become motivated in their present educational pursuit and are more likely to finish high school.”
If your organization or group is interested in visiting NCK Tech, schedule a tour on the college’s website at www.ncktc.edu.
7 Kan. schools in innovation program decide to drop out
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Seven school districts in Kansas that were given special status through the state’s “Coalition of Innovative School Districts” program now say it’s not worth the effort.
The districts last week asked the Kansas Board of Education to release them from the program that began in 2013.
Districts that join have the freedom to ignore some state oversight in exchange for pursuing novel approaches for improving student achievement. The seven participating districts say they want to continue to collaborate, but as an informal network.
The coalition uses the program to loosen teacher licensure and state assessment requirements. Some unions and education advocates argue that the regulations are needed to maintain high standards.
Blue Valley USD #229, Concordia USD #333, Fredonia USD#484, Hugoton USD #210 , Kansas City USD #500, Marysville USD #364 and McPherson USD #418 are the schools included.
Kan. felon jailed for alleged home-invasion kidnapping, arson
SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with alleged home invasion robbery, kidnapping and arson.

Just after 9:30p.m. Friday, police responded to report of a hit and run accident that included a Lincoln Navigator striking another vehicle at Harry and Southeast Boulevard in Wichita and leaving the scene, according to officer Charley Davidson.
Later that evening, police responded to Antler to assist Wichita Fire Department crews and found the Lincoln Navigator that had been set on fire. Witnesses indicated a suspect identified as 26-year-old Taylor Kremer pulled a bicycle from the back of the SU, firing multiple gunshots in the air and fleeing the scene, according to Davidson.
While authorities were investigating the vehicle fire, five people told police Kremer had entered their home in the 500 Block of East Zimmerly, displayed a knife, indicated he had a gun, took their cell phones and a 2005 Dodge Stratus from the residence.
Officers responded to the address, located the vehicle, attempted a traffic stop but the driver sped away. Officers began a pursuit. The suspect vehicle stopped near the intersection of 13th and Shadyway and Kremer fled on foot. Officers chased and took him into custody.
Kremer is being held in the Sedgwick County Jail on requested charges of kidnapping, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, arson, possession of a firearm by a felon, aggravated weapons violations, a Kansas Department of Corrections warrant, according to Davidson.
In October Kremer was paroled from Coffey County after two convictions for burglary, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.
Wayne Carl Larson
Wayne Carl Larson was born to his Swedish father Carl Larson and his Austrian-Hungarian mother Ida (nee Tongish) Larson on August 12th, 1923, in Rawlins County at their farm near Ludell along present-day highway 36 (two miles west of Midway). As the couple’s second child, he joined older sister Bernice, and was followed by his younger sister Lorraine. The family moved to the Larson farm seven miles southwest of Oberlin along the north fork of Sappa Creek when Wayne was two years old. Wayne grew up in hard times when the severe drought of the 1930’s led to the dust storms of the Dirty 30’s and lack of resources during the Great Depression. His parents survived by raising hogs and hanging on year by year until things got better.
He attended country school for eight years at nearby Prairie Temple. Wayne boarded in the town of Oberlin while he attended school at Decatur County High School for his first three years. During his senior year he drove a 1935 Ford to school from the family farm and graduated from DCHS in 1941.
Following high school, Wayne helped his father with their farming operation until he was drafted into the U. S. Army in August 1944. He completed his basic training at Camp Roberts in California and shipped out from there in a troop ship called the Sea Snipe for the Philippines. There he was part of the 108th Infantry campaign on the islands of Lahte, Mindinao, and Hane until the surrender of Japan which ended World War II. Wayne then served in the Korean occupation for one year until he was honorably discharged. He returned to the United States in 1946.
Upon his return from military service, Wayne resumed farming with his dad and lived a mile down the road from his parents’ farm on the Sappa Creek. At the wedding of his army buddy in Pratt County, he was introduced to his buddy’s sister, Lois Haas. With God’s blessing, they wed at her home church, St. Paul Lutheran in Natrona on May 6, 1951. Although Wayne was baptized into the Roman Catholic Church at Herndon as an infant, he became a Lutheran by rite of Confirmation in 1953 at St. John’s Lutheran and was an active communicant member at St. John’s throughout his adult life.
Along the way, Wayne and Lois were blessed with five children during their marriage: twins Suzanne and Joanne, Craig, Bonnie, and Brad. The family enjoyed camping and fishing trips together “happily” cramped into his homemade pickup camper. They also enjoyed 4H and scouting activities through the years, as well as travel to Sweden and Europe and hosting foreign visitors. Together Wayne and Lois worked hard to build their farming and ranching operation. It is remarkable what they, along with son Craig, accomplished with their grain and livestock operation.
Wayne and Lois celebrated 60 years of marriage in May 2011 and continued to enjoy their life together on the farm until God called Lois home on March 18, 2012. Wayne lived on the farm after the passing of Lois where he helped oversee the farming operation, checking on cattle regularly, and enjoying the companionship of his trusty cattle dog, Blaze. He also went to local dances, fed the trout in his fishing pond (so others could enjoy catching them), attended church services, and participated in family get-togethers. On occasion he visited the Golden Age Senior Center making a point to go on the days they served their delicious mashed potatoes. God granted him the best of health throughout his life for which he was most thankful. He boasted in his later years, “I feel like forty!” As he slowed down in his farming, one of his greatest joys was running the combine saying, “This is the most fun I’ve ever had.” His greatest pride was to be a Kansas farmer from Decatur County. His greatest hope was that the Larson family farm, which began with his Swedish grandfather who homesteaded and lived in a dugout in the late 1880’s, would continue for generations to come.
After three and a half years residing in nursing homes, Wayne was called to his eternal rest on November 16, 2018. Besides his wife, Wayne’s parents and two sisters, Bernice Webb and Lorraine Dole, preceded him in death as well as son-in-law Norman Wendelin.
Wayne is survived by son and daughter-in-law Craig and Karen Larson, son and daughter-in-law Brad and Lesia Larson, and daughter Joanne Wendelin, all from Oberlin; daughter and son-in-law Bonnie and Bill Condit of Winfield and daughter and son-in-law Suzanne and Jay Cooper of Wichita. Wayne is also survived by eleven grandchildren: Monica Larson, Carl Larson, Marissa Robinson, Colby Larson, Ladd Wendelin, Greta Perel, Rory Wendelin, Ian Crane, Eowyn Crane, Erin Lofgreen, Jordan Condit; four step-grandchildren: Brock Cooper, Justin Cooper, Kimberly Wickersham, and Ryan Duysen; and fourteen great-grandchildren in addition to other relatives and friends.
Click HERE for service details.
Try one of our New Seasonal Appetizers on Monday @ Gella’s Diner & Lb. Brewing Company
Today’s Special at Gella’s Diner & Lb. Brewing Company
117 East 11th – Downtown Hays, Kansas
MONDAY:
$2 off Starters (Dine-In Only), 4:00-6:00 P.M.
$1 off Mugs, 4:00-6:00 P.M.
Seasonal Appetizer: German Sauerkraut and Potato Balls
Crispy Little Croquettes Stuffed with Sauerkraut and Potatoes.
Served with Spicy Mustard for Dipping. $6.95
Find out more about the award winning Gella’s Diner & Lb. Brewing Company
at our Website and at Facebook.
Ellis Fire Dept. to purchase thermal camera

ELLIS – A couple of items regarding the fire department will be discussed at tonight’s Ellis City Council meeting.
Following his monthly report, Fire Chief Dustin Vine will also talk with council members about bids to replace the fire station roof as well as the purchase of a thermal camera.
The complete agenda follows.
AGENDA
November 19, 2018
REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF ELLIS
City Hall – Council Meeting Room
BILLS ORDINANCE REVIEW WORK SESSION BEGINS AT 7:00 P.M.
ROLL CALL AND MEETING CALL TO ORDER AT 7:30 P.M.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
AMENDMENTS TO AGENDA (if needed)
- CONSENT AGENDA
- Minutes from Regular Meeting on November 5, 2018
- Bills Ordinance #2057
(Council will review for approval under one motion under the consent agenda. By majority vote of the governing body, any item may be removed from the consent agenda and considered separately)
PUBLIC COMMENTS
(Each speaker will be limited to five minutes. If several people from the group wish to speak on same subject, the group must appoint a spokesperson. ALL comments from public on agenda items must be during Public Comment. Once council begins their business meeting, no more comments from public will be allowed.)
- PRESENTATIONS OF AWARDS, PROCLAMATIONS, REQUESTS & PETITIONS (HEARINGS)
- SPECIAL ORDER
- Monthly Fire Department Report – Chief Dustin Vine
- UNFINISHED BUSINESS
- Consider Bids to Replace Old Fire Station Roof
- NEW BUSINESS
- Consider Approval for Purchase of Thermal Camera for Fire Department
- Consider Approval of Application for License to Sell Cereal Malt Beverages
- Consider Approval to Host City Christmas Party
- Consider Employee Christmas Bonus
- Discussion of Vehicle Purchases
- REPORTS FROM CITY OFFICIALS
- Administrative
- Public Works
- Comparative Water Report
- Report from Recent Training
- Discussion of the Sewer Infiltration
- Department Update
- Police
- Department Update
- City Clerk
- Invitation for NWKPDC Annual Meeting
- Tourism Committee Meeting Minutes
- Department Update
- Attorney
- Update on Status of Code Violation Cases
- Mayor Update and Announcements
- Public Works
- Administrative
EXECUTIVE SESSIONS
- ADJOURNMENT
Kan. to pay nonprofit group $270K for recruiting three teachers
By NOMIN UJIYEDIIN
The Kansas Legislature agreed to pay education nonprofit Teach For America more than $500,000 this year for a pilot program to recruit 12 teachers to the state.
But the national organization only recruited three teachers for the state in 2018. All of them were placed in Kansas City, Kansas, where the local school district pays their salaries and benefits on top of another $3,000 per teacher per year to Teach For America.
Meanwhile, the state is still on the hook to pay the nonprofit $270,000 for training and recruiting teachers with no guarantee they will work in Kansas schools.
Mischel Miller, director of teacher licensure and accreditation at the Kansas State Department of Education, said the contract was intended to help fill a teacher shortage in the state.
“Our intention,” Miller said in an interview, “is that those dollars would be used for Kansas teachers.”
Yet the Kansas City, Kansas school district says it only hired three Teach For America instructors this year. Two other recruits started teaching in the district last year before Kansas hired the organization.
The state education department says Teach For America told the department it recruited all five of those teachers this year. The department is currently drafting a $270,000 contract to pay the organization.
A budget document from the Kansas Legislative Research Department dated Oct. 10 states, “Teachers will be paid a salary of $36,000.” But that money actually goes just to recruiting, training and placing each teacher.
That totals $180,000 from the state for recruiting five teachers, plus $80,000 to pay for the salary, benefits and travel expenses of a recruiter and $10,000 for one day of professional development. The rest of the money appropriated during the legislative session, totaling $250,000, will go back to the state’s general fund to be appropriated for the next fiscal year.
Such funding arrangements with the group are common across the country. Tax filings show that Teach For America received $45.2 million in government grants in fiscal year 2016, about 16.6 percent of its revenue. States such as Texas, Arkansas and Missouri have also appropriated education funds for the nonprofit.
At a meeting of the Legislative Budget Committee on Wednesday in Topeka, state lawmakers expressed disappointment in the low number of recruits and the fact that the program only placed teachers in the far eastern corner of Kansas.
“That’s the best they can do so far?” asked committee chair Sen. Carolyn McGinn, who represents a district in south-central Kansas. “I don’t recall during that appropriation process that we said, ‘Just stay in the Kansas City area.’”
In an interview, Teach For America Kansas City executive director Chris Rosson said the organization had originally presented its pilot as an extension of its program in Kansas City, Missouri, “with the opportunity for us to explore the possibility of looking westward, but with clearly no direct promises.”
Rosson said his organization planned to encourage teachers to become more familiar with other parts of Kansas. Events like an alumni reunion in Lawrence and a trip to western Kansas are scheduled for upcoming months.
But the money hasn’t been allocated yet, and will not come out of the training and recruiting budget that the state has agreed to pay this year.
“We’re eager to do those things to try to support the work that’s happening in the state of Kansas,” Rosson said. “But we are also a (nonprofit group) that has to be very deliberate about and intentional about how we are allocating our resources.”
Rosson said the vast majority of Kansas City metro placements had ended up on the Missouri side because Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools took longer to hire Teach For America recruits than Missouri schools.
A KCKPS employee confirmed that the process was slow because the district needed to make sure Teach For America candidates met a state requirement of being enrolled in a master’s degree program.
Other parts of the state’s agreement with Teach For America drew questions from lawmakers at the Legislative Budget Committee meeting on Wednesday, including the $80,000 allocated for a full-time national Teach For America recruiter based in Lawrence.
State Sen. Rick Billinger expressed skepticism about a one-day professional development program in Topeka with a price tag of $10,000.
“I’d personally like to see a little breakdown on that,” Billinger said. “It just looks kind of out of line.”
Rosson said this year’s training has not yet taken place, but the budget request was based on the cost of doing the training in previous years. The event entails busing 120 Kansas City Teach For America corps members, the vast majority of whom teach in Missouri, for a tour of the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site. Other costs include food and a speaker who leads “cultural responsive teaching and instruction,” according to a document provided by the state education department.
Rosson said he hoped the event would increase interest in teaching in Kansas after the Teach For America placements are completed.
“It’s typically a very powerful experience to have that type of content delivered in a place that has that level of historical significance,” he said.
Rosson said there were 13 Teach For America alumni currently working in Kansas — nine working as teachers and four working in school leadership positions.
Teach For America’s Lawrence-based recruiter, he said, is the first in the state. He said the recruiter is responsible for attracting applicants for Kansas, but also for the organization’s nationwide pool of potential teachers, who then rank which areas in which they’d like to be placed.
He said he wasn’t sure, but it’s possible that the Lawrence recruiter may have recruited Kansas applicants who were then assigned to schools outside of the state.
“Somebody who is from Sacramento and is going to Wichita State may choose that really what they want to do is go back to California and teach,” he said.
According to data from the state education department, there were 612 vacant teaching positions in Kansas schools this fall. Many were concentrated in the state’s population centers of Wichita and Kansas City, but schools in rural western Kansas also struggled to find qualified teachers.
At the Capitol on Wednesday, Rep. Steven Johnson said he had hoped the amount of money allocated for Teach For America would lead to more hires.
“The five teachers, I think, we’re excited about — just disappointed we don’t have more,” he said. “That ratio just doesn’t feel very good as we look at results.”
Nomin Ujiyediin is a reporter for the Kansas News Service.You can reach her on Twitter @NominUJ.
Jobless rate in Ellis County increases slightly in October

The unemployment rate in Ellis County remained relatively flat in October, increasing to 2.1 percent from 2 percent in September.
Just 355 people were officially “unemployed” in the county, according to the Kansas Department of Labor.
The jobless rate remains extremely low throughout northwest Kansas, with just Graham County posting an unemployment rate higher than 3 percent. Greeley County in far western Kansas had the lowest unemployment rate at 1.5 percent, while Linn County in far eastern Kansas post the state’s highest at 5.3 percent.
Statewide, preliminary estimates reported by the Kansas Department of Labor and Bureau of Labor Statistics show a seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of 3.3 percent in October. This was unchanged from September and down from 3.5 percent in October 2017.
Seasonally adjusted job estimates indicate total Kansas nonfarm jobs increased by 400 from September. Private sector jobs, a subset of total nonfarm jobs, increased by 1,700 from the previous month.
Since October 2017, Kansas gained 19,500 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs and 17,100 private sector jobs.
HPD Activity Log Nov. 15
The Hays Police Department responded to 3 animal calls and conducted 25 traffic stops Thu., Nov. 15, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.
Suspicious Activity–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 1:31 AM
Suspicious Activity–13th and Main St, Hays; 1:59 AM
Disturbance – Noise–200 block W 7th St, Hays; 6:30 AM; 7:30 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–Hays; 7:47 AM
Animal At Large–400 block W 14th St, Hays; 9:57 AM
Harassment (All Other)–200 block E 7th St, Hays; 11:11 AM
Suicidal Subject–1100 block E 27th St, Hays; 12:39 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–1300 block Oak St, Hays; 12:52 PM
Phone/Mail Scam–1300 block E 33rd St, Hays; 8 AM; 1 PM
NCIC Hit–2100 block Commerce Pkwy, Hays; 1:53 PM; 2:33 PM
MV Accident-Private Property-Hit and Run; 500 block W 27th St, Hays; 2:18 PM
Suicidal Subject–1300 block W 27th St, Hays; 2:31 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1100 block E 22nd St, Hays; 2:55 PM
Suspicious Activity–1000 block W 28th St, Hays; 4:18 PM
Harassment, Telephone/FAX–1600 block E 22nd St, Hays; 4:24 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–4800 block Vine St, Hays; 4:44 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–2000 block Oak St, Hays; 4:57 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–200 block E 20th St, Hays; 5:58 AM
Drug Offenses–1400 block Ash St, Hays; 6:49 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1300 block Steven Dr, Hays; 7:30 PM
Found/Lost Property–2900 block Vine St, Hays; 8:08 PM
Harassment (All Other)–1500 block Marjorie Dr, Hays; 8:39 PM
Battery – Domestic–1400 block Oak St, Hays; 11:23 PM
Weber and Wiltse headline All-CPL volleyball teams
Victoria has landed three players on the 2018 All-Central Prairie League Volleyball team.
Senior Kali Weber and Otis-Bison junior Maddie Wiltse headline the first-team as unanimous selections.
They are joined on the first-team by seniors Tianna Epperson of Ness City and Maddy Ward of Ellinwood, Macksville junior Brooke Smith and sophomore from Ellinwood Mya Maxwell.
Central Plains landed two players on the second-team, junior Addison Crites and senior Avery Hurley. Victoria senior Ashlynn Windholz was also joined on the second-team by fellow seniors Rylee Gleason of Kinsley, St. John’s Jackie Rios and Lexas Wright from Macksville.
Victoria senior Ally Dinkel was named to the honorable mention team along with seniors Kaleigh Maier and Hannah Tanger from Otis-Bison and Ellinwood’s Kaitlyn Pohlman. Central Plains junior Rachel Lamatsch was also named to the honorable mention team.





