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University to close for semester break; Sternberg open for regular winter hours

FHSU University Relations

The Sternberg Museum of Natural History and the Kansas Wetlands Education Center will be the only two Fort Hays State University enterprises open during winter break.

The university closes at the end of business on Friday, Dec. 21, and will not reopen until Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019.

The Sternberg Museum, 3000 Sternberg Drive, will be closed Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day but will otherwise be open for its normal winter hours: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and from 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday.

The museum is closed on Mondays from Oct. 1 through March 19.

The KWEC, 592 NR. K-156 Highway, Great Bend, about 12 miles northeast of the city, will also be closed Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day but will otherwise be open for its normal winter hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday.

The Wetlands Center’s winter hours are from Nov. 1 through March 31.

The main campus will be closed down for the break period except for essential services.

The University Police Department office will be closed but full patrol schedules will be maintained, and operators will remain on duty at the power plant.

Kansas felon back in jail for alleged highway robbery

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with an alleged highway robbery.

Hollis -photo Sedgwick Co.

Just after 6:30 p.m, police responded to a disturbance with weapons call at the apartments in the 3800 block of east 16th Street North in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

A 26-year-old female victim told police she arrived at the apartments and was approached by 22-year-old Terrance Hollis and another unknown suspect. Hollis pointed a gun at her and demanded she exit her vehicle. The victim refused and Hollis and the other suspect fled on foot.

Officers began circulating the area and located Hollis hiding in a vehicle in the 1500 block of north Gentry, according to Davidson. Police arrested him Hollis and he was booked into jail on requested charges of aggravated highway robbery, resist arrest and outstanding warrants.  He has a previous robbery conviction, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Parker steps down as head soccer coach at FHSU; takes position Saint Leo in Florida

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer

HAYS, Kan. – Brett Parker, Head Coach of the Fort Hays State University Men’s Soccer program, announced on Thursday he is stepping down from his current position to take the head coaching position of the men’s soccer program at Saint Leo University in Saint Leo, Florida. Parker just completed his eighth season as head coach at Fort Hays State.

“Coach Parker did an outstanding job building our men’s soccer program from the very beginning of its existence,” FHSU Director of Athletics Curtis Hammeke said. “He provided excellent leadership for our student-athletes while competing at the conference, regional and national level. We wish him the very best in all his future endeavors.”

Parker put together an impressive 100-40-18 record in his eight years at Fort Hays State. He immediately made FHSU competitive in its inaugural 2011 season, guiding the team to a solid 11-5-2 record. After the inaugural season, the Tigers went on to make to seven consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances from 2012 to 2018, culminating in a national semifinal appearance this past season. The 2018 Tigers posted a 17-2-2 mark, the program’s best record under Parker. Fort Hays State claimed back-to-back MIAA Championships in 2017 and 2018, including the conference’s first-ever perfect mark in 2018 at 8-0. The program earned four NCAA Central Region titles on his watch in 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2018.

Fort Hays State won at least 11 games in every year of Parker’s tenure, averaging 12.5 per season. That is truly impressive considering the regular season schedule is 18 games each year. The Tigers have been a staple in the United Soccer Coaches Top 25 Poll on a yearly basis, with a No. 4 ranking being the highest ever in program history at the culmination of the 2018 season.

In Parker’s time guiding the Tigers, the program boasted 10 All-America selections, including the 2018 D2CCA National Player of the Year – Santiago Agudelo. He also coached 65 All-MIAA selections, 60 all-region selections, four MIAA Players of the Year, four MIAA Freshmen of the Year, and three D2CCA Central Region Players of the Year. Parker earned MIAA Coach of the Year in both the 2017 and 2018 seasons, while he and his staff earned United Soccer Coaches Regional Staff of the Year honors in 2018.

“First of all, I would like to thank Curtis Hammeke and former FHSU President Dr. Edward Hammond for giving me the opportunity to start the program here from scratch eight years ago,” said Parker. “So many players, coaches, administrators, and support staff have been instrumental in the immediate and continued success of the program. Fort Hays State is a truly special place and I will be forever grateful for having been a part of such an amazing place. I am excited to see the program continue to thrive from afar!”

Parker completed his 11th season overall as a head men’s soccer coach at the collegiate level in 2018. He coached two years at Lyon College (2009-2010) in Arkansas and one year at College of Santa Fe (2008) in New Mexico before his eight years at FHSU. He carries an overall coaching record of 126-61-21 to Saint Leo University.

A national search for a new head coach of the Fort Hays State Men’s Soccer program begins immediately.

Kansas woman charged in death of 19-month-old son

LEAVENWORTH. (AP) — A northeast Kansas woman has been charged in the death of her 19-month-old son.

The Leavenworth Times reports that 31-year-old Catherine Smith made her first appearance Wednesday on a second-degree murder charge and requested a court-appointed attorney.

Leavenworth Police Chief Pat Kitchens says police went to Smith’s residence on Nov. 29 in response to a report that a small child wasn’t breathing. Her son, Maverick Smith, was taken to a hospital, but he later died.

Kitchens say police conducted an extensive investigation that focused on possible neglect. Smith surrendered to authorities Tuesday.

County Attorney Todd Thompson says Smith isn’t accused of intentionally killing her son. The boy’s death is alleged to have resulted from “extreme indifference to the value of human life.” No other details were released.

Spirit AeroSystems announces 1,400 new jobs at Wichita plant

WICHITA (AP) — Aircraft parts maker Spirit AeroSystems announced Wednesday it plans to hire an additional 1,400 people next year at its Wichita plant.

Spirit Chief Executive Officer Tom Gentile said in a news conference that the new hiring will come on top of the 1,000 new jobs the company said last year it planned to add as part of a $1 billion expansion at its Wichita facility. The company reached that job goal within months, he said.

Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer called the latest announcement “the biggest news in this state in a long time.”

The Wichita Eagle reported the new jobs will bring the number of employees at the company’s headquarters in Wichita from 11,000 on the day of the December 2017 expansion announcement to 13,400 employees by the end of 2019, Gentile said.

Its website says the company has more than 15,000 employees worldwide.

Spirit AeroSystems, Wichita’s largest employer, revealed plans in May for a 150,000-square-foot building that will be part of the $1 billion expansion.

Boeing sold its Wichita and Oklahoma operations in 2005 in a move that spun off the company now known as Spirit AeroSystems. It now builds aircraft parts for multiple commercial and defense customers, including Boeing 373 fuselages.

Holy Family celebrates Mother Mary’s Baby Shower

Holy Family

Holy Family Elementary celebrated the upcoming birth of Jesus with a school-wide baby shower for Mother Mary.

A faculty committee plans and prepares for Mary’s baby shower. Classes sign up on a schedule to acquire a time to attend the baby shower in the school activity center. 

Students open their gift, which is previously bought and wrapped, in their perspective classrooms and then head to the activities center for treats and refreshments.

Students place their gift on a set of tables lined along the wall. The items that were in most need were diapers, wipes, formula, bottles, teething rings and hooded bath towels. All items are donated to local Catholic Charities.

After eating their treats, students enjoyed a rousing game of Price is Right or took a spin on the wheel. Each section of the spinning wheel represented a different prayer that each student would then recite for the receivers of the gifts.

“Obviously, we can’t give gifts directly to Mary for the child Jesus, but we can assist the many brave women who have chosen life despite some of the difficulties they experience, and we can reinforce their joy through the child who comes as a gift,” Holy Family said in a news story on their website.

Kan. man ordered to stand trial in girlfriend’s beating death

Shawnee County
TOPEKA (AP) — A judge has found sufficient evidence for a man to stand trial in the beating death of his girlfriend in Topeka.

Thirty-four-year-old Luke Anthony Wabaunsee was bound over for trial Wednesday on a charge of premeditated first-degree murder. He was arrested one day after 42-year-old Michelle Stadler was found dead in October in a north Topeka apartment.

WIBW-TV reports that a detective testified at the preliminary hearing that Wabaunsee’s DNA was found on the handle of a bloody glass mug recovered from Stadler’s apartment.

Her neighbor, Shawn Cunningham, testified that Wabaunsee wanted her to quit using meth. Another neighbor, Marcia Paden, said she heard a man’s voice say he “wasn’t going to take it anymore.”

Wabaunsee is jailed on $1 million bond. His trial is scheduled to begin in April.

Putin issues chilling warning on rising nuclear war threat

PARIS, FRANCE – MAY 29, 2017 : Vladimir Putin, the President of Russian Federation, speaks in Paris in May 2017. / shutterstock.com
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
Associated Press

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin issued a chilling warning Thursday about the rising threat of a nuclear war, saying “it could lead to the destruction of civilization as a whole and maybe even our planet” — and putting the blame squarely on the U.S.

Speaking at his annual news conference, Putin scoffed at Western claims he wants to dominate the world and said Western countries are antagonizing Russia for their own domestic reasons, and at their own peril. He dismissed claims of Russian interference abroad, from a nerve agent poisoning in Britain to an alleged effort to infiltrate the U.S. National Rifle Association.

Instead he sought to paint himself as the world’s protector. Pointing at the U.S. intention to withdraw from the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces, or INF, Treaty, Putin warned that if the U.S. puts intermediate-range missiles in Europe, Russia will be forced to take countermeasures.

“We are witnessing the breakup of the arms control system,” Putin said, noting the U.S. plan to opt out of the INF Treaty and its reluctance to negotiate the extension of the New START agreement. U.S. officials say the withdrawal from the INF was prompted by Russian violations of the treaty.

Putin noted that Western analysts are talking about the possibility of using low-yield nuclear weapons.
“There is a trend of lowering the threshold” of using nuclear weapons, Putin said. “Lowering the threshold could lead to a global nuclear catastrophe.”

“We will have to ensure our security,” he said. “And they shouldn’t squeak later about us gaining unilateral advantages. We aren’t seeking advantages, we are trying to preserve the balance and ensure our security.”

Putin also emphasized that the U.S. is pondering the use of ballistic missiles with conventional warheads, saying that the launch of such a missile could be mistaken for the launch of a nuclear-tipped one and trigger a global catastrophe.

“If that happens, it could lead to the destruction of civilization as a whole and maybe even our planet,” he said.

Putin also noted that the U.S. appears to show little interest in extending the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty, which expires in 2021.

“You aren’t interested, you don’t need it? OK, we know how to ensure our security,” he said.

Putin said it’s the U.S., not Russia, that’s aspiring to dominate the world. He pointed at U.S. annual defense spending exceeding $700 billion, comparing it with Russia’s military budget of $46 billion.

He had one nice thing to say about the United States, however: He welcomed President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw the U.S. military from Syria.

The U.S. “has done the right thing,” Putin said, reaffirming the long-held Russian argument that the U.S. presence in Syria was illegitimate because it wasn’t vetted by the U.N. Security Council or approved by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government. The pullout is also likely to strengthen Russia’s role in Syria’s future.
Putin said accusations of Russian interference in the West were trumped-up.

He insisted that a Russian woman in U.S. custody has not carried out any mission for the Russian government, even though she has pleaded guilty to acting as a covert agent of the government. Putin claimed that Maria Butina — accused of trying to infiltrate the NRA and American conservative circles around the time of Trump’s election — made the guilty plea because of the threat of a long prison sentence in the case, which Putin described as fabricated.

He described British accusations of Russian involvement in the poisoning of a former spy in Salisbury as part of Western efforts to isolate and weaken Russia. However, he voiced readiness to normalize ties after the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter in March.

Putin showed no sign of backing down from Russia’s stance on Ukraine. He accused his Ukrainian counterpart of provoking a naval standoff with Russia to boost his electoral prospects. The Russian coast guard fired upon and seized three Ukrainian naval vessels and 24 seamen when they tried to sail from the Black Sea into the Sea of Azov in what U.S. and its NATO allies condemned as unjustified use of force by Russia.

On the economy, Putin hailed another year of Russian growth after a previous period of stagnation.

Russia’s gross domestic product is set to grow by 1.8 percent this year, while industrial output has grown faster at 3 percent, he said.

The Russian president noted that the nation’s hard currency reserves have increased from $432 billion at the start of the year to $464 billion now.

The positive statistics follow a difficult period in recent years when Russia’s economy has suffered a combined blow of low oil prices and Western sanctions.

Russia’s economy registered 1.5-percent growth last year following the two-year stagnation.

Putin pledged that the government will create incentives to speed up growth.

Kan. man arrested on suspicion of DUI after driving into building

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a man has been arrested on suspicion of drunken driving after he crashed through the glass front of a Topeka office building.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that police responded Wednesday night after the man drove into the Compliance One building while attempting to turn.

Police say the driver wasn’t injured and officers administered a sobriety test at the scene. The man was then arrested.

Evelyn Elaine Clapper

Evelyn Elaine Clapper, 81, passed away December 14, 2018 at the Kearney Regional Medical Center. She was born to Ralph R. and Zelpha (Pevler) Sigwing on March 13, 1937 in Wray, CO. On July 2, 1952, Evelyn married Ralph L. Clapper, Sr. in Raton, NM.

Evelyn is survived by her husband, Ralph of Oberlin, KS; children: Delaine Raliegh and husband Roger of Selden, KS, Ralph L. Clapper, Jr of Oberlin, KS, Desiree Bergmeier of Fairbury, NE, Dawn McComb of Oberlin, KS, Darla McCullough of Chetek, WI, and John D. Clapper of McCook, NE; Sister-In-Laws; Carolyn Flynn of Foley, AL and Fern Sigwing of Wray, CO; 17 grandchildren, 18 great grandchildren, and 2 great great grandchildren.

Private services were held with burial at Oberlin Cemetery, Oberlin, KS.

Kenneth Morris Pryor

Kenneth Morris Pryor, 77, passed away December 18, 2018, at Harry Hynes Hospice, Wichita. He was born January 1, 1941 at Great Bend and was the Great Bend Tribune’s “New Year Baby of 1941”. He was the son of M.F. “Hap” Pryor and Wanda (Morris) Pryor.

Kenneth graduated from Great Bend High School in 1959. During high school he was a member of the Argonne Rebels Drum and Bugle Corps. He attended Fort Hays State University and St. Mary of the Plains Junior College. He was a member of the Prince of Peace Parish at St. Patrick Catholic Church, Knights of Columbus and Elks (BPOE). He worked for Petro Exploration in Oklahoma as an oil exploration crew member and later worked for GeoSearch, Inc. for many years. He then became a caregiver for his mother in her later years and worked as a carrier for the Great Bend Tribune.

Survivors include, one sister Connie Strobel and husband John of Pueblo, Colorado, a niece, a nephew and several cousins.

Visitation will be held from Noon to 9:00 p.m., Thursday, December 20, 2018 at Bryant Funeral Home. The family will receive friends at 9:30 a.m., a Knights of Columbus Rosary at 10:00 a.m. and Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30 a.m., all Friday, December 21, 2018, at St. Patrick Catholic Church. Father Don Bedore will preside and interment will follow in the Great Bend Cemetery.

Memorials are suggested to the Prince of Peace Parish, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

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