Fifteen members of the Fort Hays State University Shotgun team placed highest overall team at the 2018 Scholastic Clay Target Program College National Championships, held recently in Marengo, Ohio.
There were 220 shooters representing 22 colleges from across the United States.
Teams were split into two divisions, with FHSU being placed in Division 2. FHSU participated in three events and placed first with all three teams in all three events. The top five scores from FHSU were used for team scores.
The first-place trap team was Austin Svoboda, Burwell, Neb., senior; Riley Ross, St. Paul, Neb., sophomore; Cody Escritt, Pleasanton, Neb., senior; Jake Whipple, Cambridge, Neb., senior; and Wyatt Pursell, Topeka senior, with a score of 988 out of 1,000.
The first-place skeet team was Jerrod Lies, Minneola senior; Escritt, Pursell, Svoboda and Whipple, with a score of 989 out of 1,000.
The first-place sporting clays team was Josh Crankshaw, North Platte, Neb., senior; Escritt, Ross, Svoboda and Whipple with a score of 919 out of 1,000.
Individual awards are divided between men and women. Heather Gordon, Pine Valley, Calif., junior, won highest overall woman with 554 out of 600. Svoboda won highest overall man with 588 out of 600, and Escritt was runner up with 580 out of 600.
Other individual awards include Jenny Schoenecker, Akron, Colo., senior, who placed first in sporting clays. Gordon placed second in skeet. Svoboda was first in trap, second in skeet and third in sporting clays. Whipple was third in skeet and Ross was third in trap.
Staff from Fort Larned National Historic Site will be at the Hays VA Clinic, 207 E. 7th St # B, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, November 20, handing out the America the Beautiful Access pass to qualifying disabled veterans.
Holiday Children’s Memorial Tree hanging of ornaments and dedication
Saturday, November 17, 2018, 11 a.m. at Jackie Creamer’s, The Dance Studio, 1003 Main Street, Hays.
Healing Hearts Support Group
* Offers hope, comfort, and empowerment to bereaved parents and families in a confidential, caring, respectful environment.
* Healing Hearts is an open group for anyone who has lost a child of any age from miscarriage and stillborn through adulthood.
For more information contact Doris Schmidt at 785-735-2578 or Ann Leiker at 785-259-6859.
Fort Hays State Weekly Football Press Conference November 13th, 2018
Fort Hays State head coach Chris Brown conducted his weekly press conference in advance of the Tiger’s upcoming playoff game with the University of Indianapolis Saturday afternoon in Indianapolis. Brown and select players met with the media inside Lewis Field on Tuesday, a session that can be seen by clicking on the video below.
(00:00 Head Coach Chris Brown, 11:12 Linebacker Jose Delgado, 13:50 Receiver Harley Hazlett)
BALTIMORE (AP) — Several Roman Catholic bishops on Tuesday urged colleagues at their national meeting to take some sort of action on the clergy sex abuse crisis despite a Vatican order to delay voting on key proposals.
“We are not branch managers of the Vatican,” said Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois. “Our people are crying out for some action.”
He suggested a nonbinding vote to convey a sense of the bishops’ aspirations regarding anti-abuse efforts.
Bishop George Murry of Youngstown, Ohio, echoed Paprocki’s call, saying parishioners and priests in his diocese are “very, very angry.”
The three-day assembly opened Monday with a surprise announcement by Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The Vatican, he said, was ordering the bishops to delay votes on two anti-abuse proposals until after a Vatican-convened global meeting on sex abuse in February.
DiNardo indicated there were two principal reasons for the Vatican order: to ensure that steps taken by the U.S. bishops would be in harmony with steps decided at the February meeting, and to provide more time for vetting aspects of the U.S. proposals that might conflict with church law.
Even without the option of a formal vote this week, the U.S. bishops proceeded with discussion of the two key proposals. One would establish a new code of conduct of individual bishops; the other would create a special commission, including lay experts, to review complaints against the bishops.
However, the bishops are under pressure to take additional steps, as stressed in an address to the assembly Tuesday by Francesco Cesareo, chairman of the National Review Board, which the bishops created in 2002 to monitor the church’s efforts to prevent clergy sex abuse.
“Your response to this crisis has been incomplete,” Cesareo told the bishops. “It is shameful that the sin of abuse was hidden and allowed to fester until uncovered by the secular world.”
He cited the grand jury report released in August in Pennsylvania. It detailed decades of abuse and cover-up in six dioceses, alleging more than 1,000 children had been abused over the years by about 300 priests. Since then, a federal prosecutor in Philadelphia has begun working on a federal criminal case centered on child exploitation, and attorneys general in at least 11 other states have launched investigations.
“How many souls have been lost because of this crisis?” Cesareo said.
He urged all U.S. bishops to commit to conducting a thorough review of their dioceses’ files, dating to at least 1950, and publicly sharing a list of any clergy who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable adults.
“To maintain credibility, the review process must involve the laity in some form, such as a diocesan review board or external firm,” Cesareo said.
Some bishops had taken this step, he noted, and urged the others to follow suit.
Cesareo also endorsed the bishop conference’s proposal for a thorough investigation of the scandal involving disgraced church leader Theodore McCarrick. Pope Francis removed McCarrick as a cardinal in July after church investigators said an allegation that he groped a teenage altar boy in the 1970s was credible.
Subsequently, several former seminarians and priests reported they too had been abused or harassed by McCarrick as adults, triggering debate over who might have known and covered up McCarrick’s misconduct.
Another speaker, Anita Raines of the conference’s National Advisory Council, said any investigation of the McCarrick case should determine what sort of care his victims received and provide details of financial settlements they received.
Raines also called for an audit of Catholic seminaries in the U.S., including investigation of possible “predatory homosexual behavior” taking place at them.
At one point during the morning session, Bishop Shawn McKnight of Jefferson City, Missouri, expressed dismay that the Vatican “doesn’t trust us” and asked Cesareo what the USCCB should do.
“Decisively act on this issue and continually move it forward,” Cesareo replied. “If that doesn’t happen, I fear for the future of our church.”
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Fort Hays State senior Micquille Robinson was named MIAA Wrestler of the Week on Tuesday (Nov. 13) for his efforts these past two weeks in the Dan Harris Open and the Bethany Swede Open. This is the first honor for Robinson in his Tiger career.
Robinson began his senior campaign on a good note in the 184-pound weight class at the Dan Harris Open (Nov. 4) with a 4-0 sweep for his first individual title of the season. Robinson received a bye in the first round before defeating Tyson Albright of Benedictine in a 10-5 decision. Robinson then used a 3-0 decision to defeat Joshua Nelson of Concordia (Neb.) to advance to the semifinal round. The Wichita, Kan. native then defeated Jacob Smith of Baker with a 3-1 decision. Robinson finished off the tournament with a 4-3 decision over Alex Kauffman of Northeast Oklahoma in the title bout.
At the Bethany Swede Open (Nov. 10), Robinson walked away with a 5-0 day in the 184-pound weight class. He picked up three decisions in his first three bouts over Joey Ewalt (5-2), Ivan Balavage (7-5) and Kevin Murry (5-0). In the semifinal match, Robinson pinned Brett Barefoot of Schreiner University in exactly 5:00. He kept his unbeaten streak with a victory over Alex Kauffman again after he bowed out due to injury.
Robinson and the rest of the Tiger wrestlers will be back at it this weekend when they compete in the Nebraska-Kearney Open on Saturday (Nov. 17). The tournament is slated to commence at 9 a.m.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Records show that a man arrested in a deadly Wichita shootout had been paroled just a few months earlier for a 2008 killing.
Oliver -photo Sedgwick Co.
Aubrey Montez Oliver, 28, was booked into the Sedgwick County Jail on suspicion of first-degree murder. He was arrested after one person was killed and another person injured in a southeast Wichita shootout early Saturday. The slain person hasn’t been identified.
Kansas Department of Corrections records show that Oliver had been released from prison in July and placed on parole for the killing of Kenneth “Landy” White in Hutchinson. Oliver pleaded guilty in that case to a lesser charge of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder in exchange for his testimony against two other defendants.
SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects on drug charges after an I-70 traffic stop.
The marijuana and other items found during the stop on I-70. Photo courtesy Saline County Sheriff’s office
Just after 5p.m. November 9, a Saline County Deputy clocked a 2018 Hyundai Elantra eastbound at 93 miles per hour on Interstate 70, according to Sheriff Roger Soldan.
When the deputy stopped the vehicle near the Halstead exit, he detected the odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle.
A check of the vehicle revealed a total of 4.4 pounds of various types of marijuana, drug paraphernalia, and some cocaine. Some of the marijuana was found packaged in Pelican cases that were zip-tied to the underside of the vehicle, according to Soldan.
HennesseeMooneyham-photo Saline Co.
The driver, Janice Hennessee, 48, of McMinnville, Tennessee, was charged with speeding, distribution of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and having no tax stamp.
The passenger, Regina Mooneyham, 49, of Morrison, Tennessee, was charged with possession of opiates, distribution of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and having no tax stamp.
TOPEKA—Today, Governor Jeff Colyer, M.D. announced that his office has successfully challenged the Federal Communication Commission’s Mobility Fund Phase II (MF-II) Eligibility Map, which the Commission will soon use to determine areas that will be eligible for funding for mobile LTE broadband service buildout in unserved areas. Unlike surrounding states, Kansas was originally slated to receive almost no funding from the MF-II program unless the initial eligibility map could be challenged. The map below indicates the areas that were initially deemed eligible for MF-II support (shaded in blue), based on coverage data reported by the nation’s mobile service providers.
Initial areas (in blue) deemed eligible for MF-II support
Thanks to a $225,000 grant from the Information Network of Kansas (“INK”) Board of Directors, the Governor’s Office was able to partner with non-profit Connected Nation to conduct professional drive testing of mobile network coverage across the state. Between the months of June and September, Connected Nation staff covered 15,620 road miles to conduct tests across parts of 56 Kansas counties (Allen, Anderson, Barber, Barton, Bourbon, Brown, Butler, Chase, Clark, Comanche, Crawford, Decatur, Ellsworth, Ford, Geary, Graham, Grant, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Jackson, Jewell, Johnson, Kearny, Kingman, Kiowa, Linn, Logan, Marion, Marshall, McPherson, Mitchell, Morton, Nemaha, Neosho, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Pottawatomie, Pratt, Rawlins, Republic, Riley, Rooks, Russell, Saline, Seward, Shawnee, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Stanton, Stevens, Thomas, Wallace, and Wichita). The areas tested were chosen based on analysis of areas that were reported to be served by no more than two mobile carriers—areas deemed most likely to be unserved.
Of the 187,397 tests that were conducted, 119,994 failed (64.03%)—meaning that the tests indicated less than 5 Mbps of mobile data service, or no service at all, in areas that the carriers had reported to be served. The Governor’s Office was then able to use the testing data to challenge 13,158.63 square kilometers of the MF-II Eligibility Map—or 5,080.58 square miles—an area slightly smaller than the state of Connecticut. While the challenge data submitted is still subject to review and adjudication by the FCC, it is now possible that a significant portion of the state of Kansas will be opened up for MF-II funding support—meaning many rural Kansans could finally see their mobile services improve.
The map below shows individual speed tests conducted in Jewell County. Red dots indicate failed tests, while green dots show passing tests.
Internet speed tests conducted in Jewell County
“Mobile broadband service has become an essential tool in the daily lives of all Kansans, regardless of where they live, and it is quickly becoming a necessary resource for agriculture as well,” said Governor Colyer. “I have driven all across this state, and I know how poor mobile coverage can be in some areas. That’s why I was shocked to see that the FCC’s Mobility Fund Phase II eligibility map showed almost zero eligibility for funding in Kansas. I knew we had to do something. With support from the INK Board and our partners at Connected Nation, we did—and now there is a great chance that we’ll see large swaths of service buildout in rural parts of the state.”
The map below indicates all of the one square kilometer grid cells that were challenged within Kansas:
It is important to note that the Governor’s Office’s MF-II challenge will be supplemented by testing conducted by Kansas Farm Bureau, which received a waiver from the FCC to file its own challenge.
Kansas Farm Bureau has been working aggressively over the same period in collaboration with its membership to conduct thousands of mobile speed tests across the state—the results of which will be announced later this month. To participate, or to learn more about Kansas Farm Bureau’s efforts, visitwww.kfb.org/connectingkansas.
All MF-II challenge data must be submitted no later than November 26.
The home opener for Fort Hays State Men’s Basketball against Colorado School of Mines on Saturday (Nov. 17) has been pushed back one hour to a 4 pm start time. The game was originally scheduled for 3 pm.
Fort Hays State is hosting the NCAA Men’s Soccer Super Regional this weekend at FHSU Soccer Stadium. The Super Regional Final is scheduled for 1 pm on Saturday, so an adjustment of pushing the basketball game start time back an hour was made to avoid overlap in both events.
The NCAA Men’s Soccer Super Regional begins on Thursday (Nov. 15) at FHSU Soccer Stadium with the Midwest Region Championship between Saginaw Valley State and Ohio Valley at 4 pm. At 7 pm, Fort Hays State plays Northeastern State in the Central Region Championship. Winners of the matches Thursday will face each other in the Super Regional Final on Saturday at 1 pm. The winner of Saturday’s Super Regional Final will move on to the national semifinals in Pittsburgh, Pa.