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Sunny, mild Friday

Today Sunny, with a high near 61. South wind 5 to 10 mph increasing to 13 to 18 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 29 mph.

Tonight Mostly cloudy, with a low around 33. Breezy, with a southwest wind 5 to 10 mph becoming north 15 to 20 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 30 mph.

Saturday Mostly cloudy, with a temperature falling to around 29 by 5pm. Breezy, with a north northeast wind 15 to 24 mph, with gusts as high as 36 mph.

Saturday Night A 20 percent chance of snow before midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 20. North northeast wind 5 to 14 mph.

Sunday Mostly sunny, with a high near 40. North wind 5 to 8 mph becoming southwest in the afternoon.

Sunday NightClear, with a low around 24.

MondaySunny, with a high near 53.

Wasinger claims 111th Kansas House race; Phelps calls for recount

Republican Barb Wasinger, center, and others wait for Ellis County canvass results on Thursday night.

Hays Post

Republican Barb Wasinger collected just over 50 percent of the vote in the race for the 111th Kansas House of Representatives District and defeated incumbent Democrat Eber Phelps by just 32 votes.

According to the final vote totals presented Thursday at the election canvass Wasinger received 4,342 while Phelps got 4,310.

Hays Attorney John Bird served as a representative for Eber Phelps Thursday and submitted a request for a full recount. Phelps was not present at the election canvass.

Ellis County Clerk Donna Maskus answers a question for attorney John Bird, who was representing Democrat Eber Phelps.

Election official Donna Maskus said they will have five days to complete the recount and expect to complete it on Tuesday.

Kan. massage therapist admits secretly recording woman

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Kansas City massage therapist faces sentencing Jan. 3 after admitting that he secretly recorded video of a woman while she undressed.

Gorski -photo Johnson Co.

32-year-old Daniel Gorski pleaded guilty Thursday to a felony count of breach of privacy. He previously worked as a massage therapist at a chiropractic clinic in Gardner, Kansas.

An investigation began in 2016 after Gorski’s girlfriend reported finding a computer flash drive containing images of women undressing or nude. Prosecutors eventually charged Gorski with crimes involving several women, but the additional charges were dismissed as part of a plea agreement on Thursday.

Gorski also pleaded guilty earlier this year in Jefferson County, Kan., to possession of child pornography.

Wasinger claims 111th Kansas House race; Phelps calls for recount

Republican Barb Wasinger, center, and others wait for Ellis County canvass results on Thursday night.

Hays Post

Republican Barb Wasinger collected just over 50 percent of the vote in the race for the 111th Kansas House of Representatives District and defeated incumbent Democrat Eber Phelps by just 32 votes.

According to the final vote totals presented Thursday at the election canvass Wasinger received 4,342 while Phelps got 4,310.

Hays Attorney John Bird served as a representative for Eber Phelps Thursday and submitted a request for a full recount. Phelps was not present at the election canvass.

Ellis County Clerk Donna Maskus answers a question for attorney John Bird, who was representing Democrat Eber Phelps.

Election official Donna Maskus said they will have five days to complete the recount and expect to complete it on Tuesday.

White Kan. official tells black woman he belongs to ‘master race’

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A white county commissioner in northeast Kansas said he belongs to “the master race” as he critiqued a land-use proposal by a black city planner at a board meeting.

Leavenworth County Commissioner Louis Klemp during the Nov. 13 commission meeting -image courtesy Leavenworth County

Leavenworth County Commissioner Louis Klemp cited the Nazi ideology of Aryan supremacy Tuesday in response to the presentation by Triveece Penelton on road development options in Tonganoxie, just west of Kansas City.

Klemp told Penelton : “I don’t want you to think I’m picking on you because we’re part of the master race.”

Commissioner Robert Holland said he was shocked by the comments and that he wants Klemp to resign before his term ends Jan. 15.

Klemp told KSHB-TV off camera that his comment was a joke.

Klemp, who once ran for governor, has come under criticism in the past for making racist comments.

KBI: Man from Russell arrested for murder of 14-month-old

RUSSELL COUNTY The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), the Russell Police Department, and the Russell County Sheriff’s Office, have made an arrest for first-degree murder.

Jody Fox -photo Russell Co.

According to a media release, an arrest warrant was issued for Jody S. Fox, 27, of Russell connected to the murder of a 14-month-old child. The child died in April 2017. Fox was in a relationship with the child’s mother.

Just after 1p.m. Thursday, Fox was arrested at 115 West 17th St. in Russell. He was booked into the Russell County Jail for first-degree murder, and abuse of a child.

The Kansas Attorney General’s Office will prosecute the case.

Kan. nurse’s kidney donation triggers bi-state transplant chain

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A Kansas City nurse decided to donate a kidney to a patient, triggering a series of events that led to three people getting new organs in the first kidney donation chain collaboration between Children’s Mercy and University of Kansas hospitals.

Children’s Mercy nurse Christa Jordan wanted to donate to her patient and friend Victoria “Dayshanae” Hosman, but better matches were found and a kidney donation chain began.

Donation chains start when a donor wants to give to a person but they aren’t a good match. The donors can then give to someone they match with but don’t know.

Jordan and Hosman met the other donors and recipients at Children’s Mercy Wednesday following the six surgeries conducted on Oct. 29 and Oct. 30.

Ellis Co. election canvass will determine winner of state rep seat

CLARIFICATION: 3:55 p.m. Thursday: According to Ellis County Clerk Donna Maskus, cellphones will be allowed at Thursday’s canvass. Maskus also clarified her comment that “on the provisional ballots, we find that most ballots are counted other than a few that are not registered to vote in Ellis County.”

The story has been edited to reflect Maskus’ clarifications.

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

With the race for the Kansas House of Representative 111th District still too close to call, all eyes will be on the Ellis County election office and Clerk and Election Officer Donna Maskus on Thursday night as the vote tallies are finalized.

Just 40 votes separate incumbent Democratic State Rep. Eber Phelps and Republican challenger Barb Wasinger after the final votes were tallied on election night. Wasinger led Phelps 4,259 to 4,219 votes.

There are still approximately 200 provisional ballots and more than 30 advance ballots that still must be counted, a process Maskus said could take a significant amount of time Thursday.

The election canvass will be at 5 p.m. Thursday at the Ellis County Administrative Center in the commission chambers and a vault nearby.

During the canvass, the remaining provisional and advanced ballots are opened, counted and then added to the vote totals to determine the final tally, which is then approved by the canvassing board.

In Ellis County, the canvassing board is made up of the three county commissioners but, at Tuesday’s commission meeting, Wasinger and her campaign co-chair and fellow commissioner Dean Haselhorst both recused themselves from the process.

“While I appreciate everyone telling me what they thought I should do, I did it on my own, for the primary, and I’m very well-versed in making that decision on my own as well,” Wasinger said.

During the primary election in August, Wasinger recommended Mike Morley fill in for her on the canvassing board. Morley had to leave for another meeting before the process was over and the commission appointed County Administrator Phillip Smith-Hanes to finish the canvass.

Wasinger has again recommended that Morley take her place on the board, and Haselhorst suggested the Sheriff Ed Harbin fill in for him.

The only remaining commissioner on the board, Marcy McClelland, will nominate two people to fill in on the board. It does not have to be the two people recommended Tuesday.

According to Maskus, the evening will start with the canvassing board opening the advanced ballots and dropping those in a ballot box, which will then be taken to the machines that count the ballots.

Advanced ballots are requested and mailed to the voter ahead of the election. They are then either dropped off at any polling site or mailed back to the county Elections Office.

If they are returned through the mail, they must be postmarked the day of the election, Nov. 6, and received in the elections office by the end of the day Nov. 9.

Maskus said her office did receive some ballots postmarked Nov. 7 and they will not be counted because state statue requires them to be postmarked by election day.

She said some counties are having issues with some ballots not having been postmarked. Representatives with the U.S. Postal Service told Maskus not all mail that is dropped in a mail box will be postmarked.

But Maskus said she worked with the post office in Hays to guarantee that all ballots were stamped.

“Every ballot that came here to us they stamped when they received it,” said Maskus. “Not when it was processed but when they received it here before they put it in the box.”

If they do not have a postmark, state statute says they are not to be counted, according to Maskus.

On the outside of the advanced ballots, the voter must sign the envelope and Maskus said that signature must match the one on file when the voter registered. If it does not match, it cannot be counted, she said.

Maskus said if they determine a ballot cannot be counted, she will give the canvassing board the reason why under the Kansas statue.

Once they are opened, making sure to keep the anonymity of the voter intact, they will then hand the ballots off the election board workers who will run the ballots through the vote tabulating machine.

Because there were some precincts that had a greater than expected turnout, there are some ballots that were photocopies that are made of a different paper and must be hand counted. Maskus said those official ballots have a special stamp to guarantee they were handed out by certified election staff.

Once the ballot stock is ran through the machine, Maskus said the election board will then go back over the ballots.

Maskus said she has three election boards made up of three people each.

They will be responsible for counting and tabulating the write-ins. They will also look over ballots to ensure that the correct vote is counted, if there is a question as to the voter’s intent.

While the election board is counting and rechecking the results from the advanced ballots, the canvassing board will begin the process of opening provisional ballots to determine whether they will be counted, according to state statute.

A voter may receive a provisional ballot, which is a paper ballot, if there is a question about their voter status.

CLARIFIED, 3:55 p.m. Thursday: Maskus said most provisional ballots are counted other than a few that are not registered to vote in Ellis County. Those individuals are then given a voter registration card to fill out so they are registered in the next election, but that provisional ballot will not be counted.

Provisional ballots are also given to someone who comes to the polls without a valid ID, who has changed their name or address and not re-registered, or if they received an advanced ballot but the attempted to vote at the polls.

They canvassing board will then determine if those can be counted or not, according to Maskus.

“They’ll decide per Kansas statue which ones can be counted,” she said.

Anyone who receives a provisional ballot can contact the county clerk’s office or attend the canvass to determine if their vote was counted or not.

Once they determine what provisional ballots can be counted the canvassing board will go through the same process of opening the ballots and then transferring them to the election board, which will run them through the tabulation machines.

Once that process is completed, election officials will go through and count any write-in candidates and look over every ballot.

“Our ballots are always doubled-checked by another board,” said Maskus.

Once all of the ballots are counted and the write-in votes are recorded, all of the results will be tallied and presented to the canvassing board, which will then decide whether to accept the final results.

Maskus said the public is invited to attend and can watch the process.

She will also take questions from the public after the final results are presented.

Any candidate wanting a recount must call for one by 5 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 16. Maskus said her office would have five days to complete the recount, which includes the weekend.

HPD Activity Log Nov. 13 & 14

The Hays Police Department responded to 10 animal calls and conducted 16 traffic stops Tue., Nov. 13, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Found/Lost Property–1400 block US 183 Alt Hwy, Hays; 8:22 AM
Animal Call–2600 block Donald Dr, Hays; 9:25 AM
Dead Animal Call–300 block W 27th St, Hays; 10:44 AM
Animal At Large–1500 block 40 Bypass Hwy, Hays; 1:49 PM
Found/Lost Property–3700 block Vine St, Hays;  2:59 PM
Dead Animal Call–500 block W 33rd St, Hays; 4:28 PM
Sex Offense–500 block Walnut St, Hays; 5:01 PM
Animal Call–100 block E 19th St, Hays; 5:40 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–100 block E 18th St, Hays; 9:19 PM
Suspicious Activity–600 block Ash St, Hays; 10:57 PM
Disturbance – Noise–500 block E 8th St, Hays; 11/13/2018 11:06:12 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 1 animal call and conducted 11 traffic stops Wed., Nov. 14, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Assist – Other (not MV)–1000 block Fort St, Hays; 4:04 PM
Suicidal Subject–2700 block Hickory St, Hays; 4:24 PM
Parking Complaint–3200 block Barclay Dr, Hays; 11/4 12 PM; 11/14 4:56 PM
Suspicious Activity–600 block E 7th St, Hays; 6:20 PM
Burglary/residence–200 block W 6th St, Hays; 7:59 PM
Aggravated Battery–300 block E 6th St, Hays; 12:10 AM; 12:14 AM
Burglary/business–100 block E 27th St, Hays; 2:10 AM; 2:45 AM
Suspicious Activity–2700 block Vine St, Hays; 6:35 AM
Burglary/business–1100 block E 27th St, Hays; 6 AM; 6:20 AM
MV Accident-Personal Injury–1000 block E 27th St, Hays; 7:32 AM
MV Accident-Property Damage–400 block W 8th St, Hays; 7:55 AM; 7:59 AM
Found/Lost Property–2700 block Plaza Ave, Hays; 8:34 AM
Welfare Check–2100 block E 21st St, Hays; 9:01 AM
Credit Card Violations–2900 block Grant Ave, Hays; 9:55 AM
Shoplifting–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 10:15 AM
Traffic/Driving Complaint–2500 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 1:15 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–100 block W 37th St, Hays; 3:48 PM

Schwan’s including Salina facilities sold to South Korean firm

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) — Schwan’s Co, a food distributor with deep roots in Minnesota known for its gold home-delivery trucks, has been sold to South Korea’s largest food manufacturer.

Seoul-based CJ CheilJedang will pay $1.8 billion for an 80 percent stake in Schwan’s and gain control of its businesses that serve restaurants, grocery stores and other retailers, the companies said in a statement Thursday. The deal which includes facilities in Salina is expected to close early next year.

The Schwan family will retain 20 percent ownership in the businesses being sold to CJCJ. The family will keep 100 percent ownership of Schwan’s Home Service Inc., the home-delivery business that Marvin Schwan began in Marshall in 1952.

The companies said Schwan’s will keep its name and its Minnesota offices in Bloomington and in Marshall. Schwan’s CEO Dimitrios Smyrnios will continue to lead the company.

Paul Schwan, a Schwan’s board member and son of Marvin Schwan, said it was important to find a partner who would honor the family’s legacy.

“We are not expecting any change,” Schwan said.

Smyrnios said other Schwan’s executives also will stay.

“Obviously there’s a certain amount of nervousness with a sale,” Smyrnios told the Minneapolis Star Tribune on Wednesday night. “We are going to operate business as usual in Marshall, business as usual in Bloomington, business as usual in Minnesota.”

Schwan’s has about $3 billion in annual sales and employs about 12,000. The company offers frozen and ready-made products, including Red Baron, Freschetta and Tony’s pizzas, Mrs. Smith’s pies, Edwards desserts and Pagoda Asian-style snacks. Schwan’s also has a food service business that sells to schools, hospitals and other institutions.

Smyrnios said Schwan’s wants to grow. “This is not a cost-cutting exercise,” he said.

CJCJ is the largest unit of the CJ Group, a conglomerate of food and related companies that was originally part of the Samsung Group. CJCJ had $14.5 billion in sales last year and is the largest food producer in South Korea. The company also sells rice, noodles and Korean sauces and spices in U.S. stores under the CJ, Annie Chun, Bibigo and Omni labels. The company also runs the Bibigo chain of Asian fast-food restaurants in California.

CJCJ said it expects to gain scale and cost efficiencies in U.S. stores with the Schwan’s acquisition. Company officials also hope Schwan’s distribution system will bring their Korean products into more U.S. groceries and restaurants.

“CJ will accelerate the globalization of Korean food culture,” CJCJ chief executive Shin Ho-kang said in a statement.

When the deal closes, Schwan’s will become a unit of CJ Foods America Corp., the U.S. subsidiary of CJCJ. CJCJ currently has five U.S. manufacturing and distribution sites and will pick up 17 food manufacturing facilities and 10 distribution centers across the United States with Schwan’s.

 

 

 

John Burton ‘Burt’ Schrum

John Burton “Burt” Schrum, beloved son of William and Ruby (Addison) Schrum, was born in Cheyenne, Wyoming on June 2, 1918, and peacefully passed away at the Andbe Home in Norton on November 14, 2018, at the age of 100.

Burt grew up in Manning, Iowa and graduated from the Manning High School. On September 21, 1939, Burt married the love of his life Betty Laverty in Manning, Iowa. Burt and Betty moved several times before making their home in Norton, Kansas, in 1955. He also proudly served in the U.S. Navy from July 11, 1944 till February 2, 1946.

Burt was a member of the United Methodist Church, American Legion, and Lions Club. He even coached numerous baseball teams, including the Norton American Legion Baseball group. One of his favorite things to do was to watch any sport. His greatest love was his family, especially his children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren.

Survivors include: five children, Burton, and wife, Lois Schrum, Tucson, Arizona; Steven Schrum, Norton, Kansas; William, and wife, Marilyn Schrum, Norton, Kansas; Barbara, and husband, Michel Magers, Greeley, Colorado; Deborah, and husband, Craig Chizek, Rose Hill, Kansas; 17 grandchildren; 24 great-grandchildren; six great-great-grandchildren; several other relatives and friends.

Burt was preceded in death by his parents, wife, four brothers, Arthur, Wayne, Lyle “Junior”, and Warren Schrum, and one sister, Marjorie Schrum.

INURNMENT – A private family inurnment will take place at a later date.

MEMORIALS – American Legion Baseball Program

Kansas AG: Kobach not liable for exposure of voter data

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ attorney general contends that Secretary of State Kris Kobach shouldn’t be held personally liable for exposing sensitive personal information about hundreds of voters and that the voters have no constitutional right to their data being kept private.

FILE PHOTO
KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office has in recent weeks filed documents outlining the state’s defense of Kobach in a lawsuit filed in June by the American Civil Liberties Union. The sensitive information exposed by Kobach’s office for 945 Kansas voters included partial Social Security numbers.

The ACLU’s lawsuit alleges “reckless maintenance” by Kobach of the Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program, which compares voter registration lists among participating states to look for duplicates. The program, which Kobach administers, is aimed at cleaning voter records and preventing voter fraud but has drawn criticism for its high error rate and lax security.

Kobach, a conservative Republican, lost this year’s race for governor and served as vice chairman of President Donald Trump’s short-lived commission on voter fraud. He has called the lawsuit baseless.

Schmidt’s office argues that the U.S. Supreme Court “has never held that there is a constitutional right to prevent government disclosure of private information” and that Kobach is legally immune from a lawsuit. The ACLU is suing Kobach as an individual and in his official capacity as the state’s top elections official.

Lauren Bonds, the legal director for the ACLU of Kansas, said even if sensitive information isn’t constitutionally protected from disclosure, its release “was still reckless and extremely harmful to the voters who have had their information exposed.”

The lawsuit contends that it isn’t known how many voters had their information exposed, but that in a single communication in 2017, Florida election officials released the names, dates of birth, addresses and partial Social Security numbers of 945 Kansas voters in responding to an open records request.

Crosscheck compares registration lists and analyzes voters’ first names, surnames and dates of birth to determine whether a person is registered in multiple states. The lawsuit contends that most of the hits are false matches.

Kobach has encouraged states to provide voters’ partial Social Security numbers and other confidential information to narrow the list. The lawsuit alleges that Kobach regularly sent voter signatures as well as the Crosscheck computer server’s address and passwords by unencrypted email.

The program was started in 2005 and had only four participants when Kobach took office in 2011. By 2017, 30 states were participating and more than 100 million voter records were added to the database, according to the lawsuit.

Eight states — Florida, Alaska, Kentucky, Washington, Oregon, New York, Pennsylvania and Massachusetts — have left the program over security and data reliability concerns since Kobach began managing it.

___

Donald Benjamin Jones

Donald Benjamin Jones, son of Terry and Diane (Andrews) Jones, was born on April 18, 1965 in Yreka, California, and peacefully passed away at CHI Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney, Nebraska on November 14, 2018 surrounded by his loving wife and children, at the age of 53.

Don grew up in Yreka and graduated from Yreka High School. On June 5, 1988, Don married the love of his life, Jenda Hardiek in Las Vegas, Nevada. Don and Jenda lived in Norton where they raised their two beautiful baby girls and he worked at Engel’s Sales and Service as a sales foreman.

Don enjoyed hunting, but his life was his two grandchildren, Mason and Colt. He loved his family more than words could ever say. Don was a wonderful man who will be missed greatly by many, especially his work family at Engel’s.

Survivors include: his loving wife, Jenda, of their home in Norton; two daughters, Haley Jones, and significant other, Deyton Hager, Cambridge, Nebraska; Shelby, and husband, Rob Schamberger, Hoxie, Kansas; two grandchildren, Mason Hager and Colt Schamberger; his parents; one brother; several other relatives and friends.

Don was preceded in death by his grandmother, Elva and grandmother-in-law, Helen Keiswetter.

CELEBRATION OF LIFE – Monday, November 19, 2018 – 10:30 A.M.

PLACE – First United Methodist Church – Norton, Kansas

VISITATION – Sunday, November 18, 2018 from 2:00 P.M. until 4:00 P.M. at the Enfield Funeral Home in Norton, Kansas.

INURNMENT – Private family inurnment will take place at a later date.

MEMORIALS – Don Jones Memorial Fund

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