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Catholic Charities celebrates 60 years of service

Bishop Gerald Vincke speaks to those attending the Catholic Charities 60th celebration. Photos courtesy Catholic Charities

 

SALINA — For 60 years, Catholic Charities has been serving the people of Salina and the surrounding area.

To recognize the milestone, an open house/reception was held Tuesday evening in the Salina facility of what is now Catholic Charities of Northern Kansas. The facility is located at 1500 S. Ninth.

“People love Catholic Charities. They love what Catholic Charities does for the community, for people,” Bishop Gerald Vincke of the Salina Roman Catholic Diocese said as he recognized all those in attendance who serve or who have served Catholic Charities in some capacity, either as an employee or volunteer.

“We feel so blessed to have you all here,” Michelle Martin, Catholic Charities executive director, told the crowd.

Martin talked about the history of Catholic Charities and noted that without the past, Catholic Charities wouldn’t be where it is today. Martin shared with the group a quote from Melody Beattie that she said encapsulates that concept:

“Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow.”

Martin attributed the success of Catholic Charities to all of the employees and volunteers who have helped the organization help others.

Martin also shared the organization’s vision for the future. Joking that she can talk a lot, Martin said she would limit her comments about the future to three items.

First, she said the organization’s offices in Manhattan were moving to a new location by April 1.

“I think great things are going to happen there,” she said.

She also talked about a grant from the Kansas Health Foundation that will allow employees to use tablets to gather more data more efficiently and do what she called social services triage. Martin said that the organization is hoping to get an app of its own to help in the process.

Finally, Martin talked about the organization’s mobile outreach program.

Martin explained that 24/7 Travel Stores has agreed to help with the mobile outreach by sponsoring the gasoline for the program. She also said that Long McArthur is giving the program new minivans.

“We’re super excited about this,” she said.

She said it was important to make sure people in rural areas have access to services.

“I think it is really important not only that we don’t neglect those people in those rural areas and so I am so happy that 24/7 and Long McArthur share that vision of reaching out to those rural communities,” Martin said.

Martin also revealed that a donor had agreed to do a fundraising match for the organization.

“We had a very generous donor come forward and agree to do a match for us. $60,000. $60,000 dollars in 60 days,” she said.

Part of the crowd at the Catholic Charities celebration.

Martin said the organization was already about halfway to its goal for the match funding.

When the Catholic Charities opened in 1959, they offered assistance to pregnant women in crisis, counseling, adoption services and operated a receiving home for neglected children out of the former Mowery Clinic at 425 W. Iron Street in Salina.

Catholic Charities of Northern Kansas now has offices in Salina, Hays and Manhattan and serves 31 Kansas counties. In addition to counseling and pregnancy and adoption services, Catholic Charities offers emergency rent and utility assistance, relief from predatory lending, homeless prevention programs, legal immigration services and partners with Salina Adult Education Center to offer a 6-week employment boot camp, Partners 4 Success, and ESL Classes.

In 2015, Catholic Charities started a Mobile Outreach Program to assist the under-served rural communities by providing food, clothing, blankets and hygiene items. Each month, Catholic Charities Mobile Outreach vans travel to Ellsworth, Lincoln, Wilson, Sylvan Grove, Minneapolis, Concordia, Osborne, Beloit, Russell, WaKeeney, Norton, Colby, Junction City, Ogden, Clay Center, Herington and Abilene.

Catholic Charities doors are open to all people living in poverty and crisis, regardless of religion.

“We do not just serve Catholics, we are here to serve anyone who asks. We don’t serve Catholics. We serve because we are Catholics,” Martin said.

Fire chief: Still working to determine cause of Kan. fire that killed 4

RILEY COUNTY — Authorities are still working to determine the cause of a fatal Thursday morning fire in the Riley County community of Ogden.

Scene of Thursday’s fatal fire in Ogden -photo courtesy WIBW TV

Four people died in the blaze. Their bodies were transported to Topeka for an autopsy and to confirm their identities, according to Riley County Rural Fire District 1 Chief Pat Collins.

Investigators with the Kansas Fire Marshal’s office, ATF and local officials believe the fire started along the east wall near the end of a couch, according to Collins. “We may never know exactly what started the fire,” he said.

Several firefighters also suffered minor injuries while working in the extreme cold.

Superintendent candidate Weitg: People more important than bricks, mortar in teaching kids

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Wetig

Jamie Wetig, candidate for Hays superintendent, said people matter.

The current Ashland Superintendent, Wetig showed this when his community was hit by a massive wildfire two years ago.

As the fire grew, the school was closed and the town was evacuated. The school district at that time was not part of the emergency management plan, but Wetig felt the district had something to offer in the crisis. He offered to serve lunch to the volunteers and firefighters.

The school district served lunch and then dinner and eventually offered its facilities as an emergency shelter. Over the better part of a week, the district housed 110 people and fed many more.

“All that started with one thought of how can I help,” he said.

Wetig said  the fire was an opportunity to volunteer, build leadership and learn how to accommodate and be flexible.

“I think if asked what you learned form the Starbuck Fire, I think I would say the community is resilient,” he said. “What did we learn about the ag community during the Starbuck Fire, not just in Kansas, but all across the country? It is that everyone in the community comes together to support one another. Maybe that is where we are at with USD 489.

“We are in a situation where we have a great community, great teachers, great students, and we need to come together and look at the needs of our students. Because it is the needs of our students that drives what we need to do.”

Wetig said he thinks the district has great programs, but it needs to expand them to create more opportunities for students. He said in talking to teachers at Hays High School, he learned Pathways and electives are getting filled up and the programs have to turn students away.

“My question to  administrators is, ‘What do you need?'” he said. “Staffing came up in every conversation. We need to have a counselors at every elementary school. We need to have additional electives so we don’t have to fight [for] our traveling teachers consistently and ask where are we going to put them in the schedule. … We need to have school nurses in our buildings. We need to have SROs. We need to address the people issue, because brick and mortar is nice when it is brand new, but it doesn’t teach our kids. People make a difference.”

Weitg, 43, is familiar with Hays. His father attended Fort Hays State University. He attended preschool at FHSU and kindergarten at Wilson Elementary School before his family moved to Ness City. His family later moved to Great Bend, where he graduated high school. He has a bachelor’s degree in education from Kansas State University, a master’s degree from Emporia State University and a administrative endorsement from FHSU.

Previously, Wetig served in Valley Center as intermediate principal from 2011 to 2013 and middle school assistant principal and activities director from 2013 to 2016. Wetig also served as the Atchison County elementary principal from 2008 to 2011.

He said he had not considered other jobs before the Hays superintendent position became available, but he has family in Hays, Russell and the immediate area.

“It would be taking over what I consider one of the marquee school districts in the state,” he said.

As the district comes back to discussions of a third bond issue try in three years, Wetig said the district needs to go back to the community, employees and staff members.

“When you have a bond issue and 1,700 people vote for it and you have 2,400 people who don’t vote for it, there is a disconnect somewhere. If the community is so supportive of our schools — its teachers and its programs, there is a disconnect somewhere. I think it means we need to start over and have conversations with our community, with our business leaders, with our parents and with our own staff.”

Ashland’s elementary and intermediate school are Gemni I schools under the state school redesign plan. The district focused on social, emotional and character development. Children were grouped for  twice-a-month student-led character lessons. The district also increased its Career Pathways from three to 11. Students are doing internships and student-led conferences. The district is also considering flex scheduling and a genius hour during which students would pick the topic they wish to study.

He said he liked the Guided Personal Study program already in place at Hays High School.

“I think that we have hit on a lot of things in our school that are best practices, and we have made them better,” he said of the Gemini program.

Kathy Rome, KNEA UniServ director, was at the meet-and-greet with Wetig Thursday afternoon. The Hays school board came to impasse during negotiations for this school year over pay. A federal meditator had to be brought in to settle the dispute.

Wetig was a KNEA student president at K-State, and he said KNEA serves a positive purpose in advocating for education.

He said if a district receives new money, it should consider raises.

“I don’t know what the magic number is, but certainly you want to try to match the average percent increase in the state,” he said. …

“I think you take care of your people first and then your operations second.”

Wetig also said he would work to strengthen board unity.

“Disagreements need to happen behind closed doors, and you must always present a unified front,” he said.

Wetig is the second of four candidates the USD 489 Hays Board of Education will be interviewing. Keith Hall, USD 489 interim director of finance and support services, interviewed for the job on Wednesday. Two more candidates will interview Wednesday, Feb. 6 and Thursday, Feb. 7.

Each day the candidates will meet with parents and other members of the public from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the Toepfer Room of Rockwell Administration Center. The names of those candidates have yet to be announced.

Game warden: Mountain lion found dead in Rooks County

ROOKS COUNTY — A female mountain lion was found dead in Rooks County on Thursday by a group of upland bird hunters, according to a social media report from Kansas Game Wardens.

Photo courtesy Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Game Wardens

The hunters immediately contacted the local game warden who responded to the scene.

The incident is under investigation.

Kansas woman dies after head-on crash with a semi

SHERIDAN COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 6p.m. Thursday in Sheridan County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Kenworth semi pulling an oversized load and driven by Johan Harder, Manitoba, Canada, was southbound on Kansas 23 four miles south of Hoxie.

The driver moved the semi over so it could clear the bridge. It struck a northbound 2012 Chevy Camaro driven by Betty L. Eisenhour, 84, Scott City, head-on.

Eisenhour was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Leopold Funeral Home.

Harder was transported to the Logan County Hospital. Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Nancy J. Farr

Nancy J. Farr, age 75, passed away on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 at the Park Lane Nursing Home in Scott City, Kansas.

She was born on November 26, 1943 in Garden City, Kansas, the daughter of Lester and Inez Persons Dillon. A resident of Scott City, Kansas since 1974 moving from Colby, Kansas, she was a house cleaner.

She was a member of the St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Scott City, Kansas. Nancy donated her body to KU Medical Center for research.

Survivors include her One Son – Courtney Farr of Eudora, Kansas, One Daughter in Law – Tamra Wilkens of Eudora, Kansas, One Granddaughter – Sierra Wilkens of Eudora, Kansas and Several Nieces & Nephews.

She was preceded in death by her Parents, One Son – Justin Farr and One Brother – Richard Dillon.

Graveside Memorial Services will be held at a later date and time.

Memorials in Lieu of Flowers may be made to the Nancy Farr Memorial Fund in care of Price & Sons Funeral Homes.

There will be no calling times.

Chuck Carper

Chuck Carper, 69, passed away Jan. 29, 2019 at St. Catherine Hospital, Garden City. He was born June 21, 1949 at Palo Alto, Cal. to James Victor & Mildred (Beach) Carper. He married Geraldine Ruble Feb. 3, 1973 at Great Bend. She survives.

Having previously resided in LaCrosse, Dodge City and Garden City, Chuck has been a Great Bend resident since 2007. He was employed for many years in truck sales and service, having recently worked for Doonan Peterbilt of Great Bend. Chuck was an avid golfer and sports fan, played slow pitch softball and enjoyed hunting, fishing and bowling. He loved his family and especially enjoyed spending time with his grandkids.

Survivors include, his wife, Geraldine “Gerri” Carper of the home; one son, Brett Carper and his wife Kari of Great Bend; one daughter, Jennifer Fischer and her husband Tom of Hudson; two sisters, Vicki Kerns and her husband Steve of Maize and Tammi Jo Sramek and her husband Joe of LaCrosse; three grandchildren, Braylee Carper, Brecklynn Carper and Braxton Fischer. He was preceded in death by his parents, James and Mildred Carper; and infant twin grandsons, Austin and Wyatt Fischer.

There will be no viewing as cremation has taken place. Visitation will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m., Monday, Feb. 4, 2019 at Bryant Funeral Home, with family present from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Memorial Service will be held at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2019 at Grace Community Church in Great Bend, with Pastor Jay Beuoy and Pastor Don Paden presiding. Inurnment will be in the La Crosse City Cemetery, La Crosse. Memorials are suggested to the FHSU Foundation to benefit the Kansas Wetlands Education Center, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.

Gregory Brown

January 1, 1961 – January 29, 2019

An obituary is pending with Plumer Overlease Funeral Homes.

Click HERE for service details.

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 2/1/19

khaz cheesy joke logo 20110802The Catch

A man was returning home from a fishing trip. He was flying down the
highway, going way too fast. He felt secure amongst a pack of cars, all
traveling at the same speed. However, it wasn’t long before he saw
flashing lights in his review mirror and pulled over.

The officer handed him the citation, received his signature, and was
about to walk away when the man stopped him. “Officer, I know I was
speeding,” he started, “but I don’t think it’s fair. There were plenty
of other cars around me going just as fast, so why did I get the
ticket?”

The officer tilted his head and gestured at the fishing gear stowed on
the passenger seat. “I see you like fishing,” he said.

“Ummm, yes I do… so?” the confused driver replied.

The officer grinned as he turned to leave. “Ever catch ALL the fish?”

 

 

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Kansas man jailed after crashing Mercedes during police chase

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on numerous charges after a chase.

William -photo Sedgwick County

Just after  9 a.m. Thursday, police were at 1800 north Rock Road enforcing traffic laws as part of the Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) Operation Impact, according to officer Charley Davidson.

A 2002 Mercedes-Benz driven by 23-year-old Carlos William drove by officers at a high rate of speed.

An officer attempted to stop the vehicle and William pulled into a parking lot in the 1700 block of north Rock Road.

As the officer pulled into the lot, the Mercedes did a U-turn and fled southbound on Rock Road.

The officer was stuck in traffic approximately 500 yards behind the Mercedes when it struck a black Chevy Suburban and a sliver Volvo at Central and Rock Road.

William then fled on foot. Officers were able to locate and arrest him after a brief foot pursuit.

Those involved in the accident received on minor injuries, according to Davidson.

Investigators determined William was involved in a pursuit with Bel Aire Police Department prior to this incident. William was booked on requested charges of resist arrest, flee and elude police, hit and run, possession of marijuana with the intent to sell and other traffic charges.

Exploring Outdoors Kansas: Groundhog Day — the star and the legend

Steve Gilliland

Two nationally recognized events will take place this week. One involves a bunch of men, who are paid entirely too much money to run, throw and kick an air-filled pig’s skin around a field. The other event revolves around a ground-dwelling varmint whose aversion to sunlight supposedly curses the land at this time each year, with six more weeks of winter. Growing up in Ohio, we had groundhogs there like we have prairie dogs in Kansas, so let me tell you a little about the star of Ground Hog Day, the groundhog.

Also known as a “woodchuck,” which comes from the Cree Indian word “wuchak,” a groundhog absolutely resembles an overstuffed prairie dog, from its large front incisor teeth, to its short stumpy tail. They are about the size of a badger, and live in deep underground burrows usually hidden it fencerows or in the edges of woodlots. They are herbivores, and are lethal to young green plants like corn and soybeans.

When I farmed, I could walk through fields of young row crops, and see row after row eaten off to the ground for several feet into the field. While not nearly as fierce as a badger, a groundhog can give a nasty bite with its big front incisor teeth, if cornered or barred from its burrow. We had one dog that was especially adept at killing groundhogs, and it was not uncommon to find old dried up groundhog carcasses around the barn during the summer. The dog would circle and maneuver itself to get them by the scruff of the neck, them shake them furiously until their neck broke.

I remember one summer day when the corn was nearly mature, we heard a horrible ruckus of growls, screams and thrashing cornstalks coming from somewhere in a cornfield near the house. By the time we found the source, that dog and a groundhog had flattened a patch of corn the size of a pickup, and once again, the groundhog had lost. I remember another time, when a neighbor’s dog named Wimpy, which was obviously not wise to woodchucks ways, ended up with one clamped onto his nose. It took several good wallops from a two-by-four to dislodge the critter. Groundhogs hibernate each winter in a special den dug just for that purpose. Research shows that during hibernation, a groundhogs body temperature falls to less than forty degrees, its breathing slows to an amazing one breath every six minutes, and its heart rate decreases to four beats per minute; the legend known as “Groundhog Day” centers around them awakening from this nearly dead state.

Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania was settled and named by the Delaware Indians as a campsite halfway between the Allegheny and Susquehanna Rivers. When German settlers arrived in the 1700’s, they brought with them a tradition known as “Candlemas Day,” celebrated in Germany on Feb. 2nd, which happens to be the midpoint between Winter Solstice and Spring Equinox, (winter and spring.) Tradition held that if Feb. 2nd were sunny, the last half of winter would be nasty and cold, and vice-versa. In Germany, for whatever reason, hedgehogs were observed to see if a shadow was cast. In Pennsylvania, given the absence of hedgehogs, groundhogs were selected to assume that role. An old German saying read: For as the sun shines on Candlemas Day, So far will the snow swirl until May; For as the snow swirls on Candelmas Day, So far will the sun shine until May.

Shutterstock.com

Pennsylvania’s first official celebration of Groundhog Day was in 1886, when the legendary groundhog was named Punxsutawney Phil, and the first trip to Phil’s mythical home on Gobbler’s Knob, was made the following year. Today Phil’s handler is local funeral director Bill Deely, who says that Phil currently weighs fifteen pounds, and thrives on dog food and ice cream in his climate-controlled home at the Punxsutawney Library. Each Feb. 2nd, he is carried up to Gobbler’s Knob and placed in a heated burrow beneath a simulated tree stump before being pulled out at 7:25 a.m. to make his annual prediction. Common sense says there have been several Phil’s since 1886, but no one has fessed-up.

Anyway, maybe we in Kansas can come up with our own figure-head to predict something, say a coyote for instance. We could call him Carl the Coyote and put him in a big pen in the middle of a CRP field where he’d be comfortable. We’d use his big fluffy tail to predict the weather. For example, if his tail was sticking straight out to one side, it was going to be windy; if his tail was wet, it’s raining, and if Carl was suddenly gone, there was probably a tornado and we’d just have to get another Carl. After all, we’ve got plenty of them! Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors.

Steve Gilliland, Inman, can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Kansas fall and spring Hunting Atlases combined

KDWPT

PRATT – The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) reminds hunters not to discard their 2018-19 Kansas Hunting Atlases. Unlike past years, there will be no spring atlas printed in 2019. All fall and spring Walk-in Hunting Access (WIHA) tracts are included in the atlas printed and distributed last August.

Additional copies are available from KDWPT offices and will be distributed as needed to license outlets this spring in time for the spring turkey season. But hunters should also go to www.ksoutdoors.com, under “Where To Hunt,” to find maps that include tracts that were enrolled after the printed atlas was completed. Due to a late-summer push for new enrollments, more than 20,000 acres were added and are included on these electronic maps.

The atlas’ legend shows color codes that designate tracts open only in the fall, tracts open in both spring and fall and tracts open only during the spring turkey season. Again this year, more than 1 million acres are enrolled.

The WIHA program was initiated in 1996 when 36,000 acres were enrolled. The program was popular with hunters and landowners and quickly grew, reaching the million-acre mark by 2004. That level of access has been sustained ever since. The newest part of the program is called iWIHA and is designed to increase enrollment in urban counties and provide high quality experiences by limiting access to a certain number of hunters on an area on a given day. Hunters can check an area’s status the night before and check in, knowing that access will be limited. For details on the iWIHA program, go to https://ksoutdoors.com/Hunting/Hunting-Programs/iWIHA-Limited-Access-Hunts

Hunters looking for quality turkey hunting opportunities should also apply through the Special Hunts program, which provides limited accessed through a lottery drawing to designated tracts of land. The 2019 Spring Turkey Special Hunts should available Feb. 2 at www.ksoutdoors.com under “Special Hunts.”

Africa’s Cirque Zuma Zuma set for perfomance in Oakley

Courtesy photo
OAKLEY — Audiences and critics in North America, Europe and Australia agree – Africa’s Cirque Zuma Zuma is unlike anything they have ever seen before. Many describe it as an African-style Cirque du Soleil; such is the standard for the performers and the quality of the show’s live musical score. Among many accomplishments, the group has even competed as a 2011 finalist on America’s Got Talent. Today, approximately 120 performers in troupes of various sizes amaze audiences across the globe. Promising young Africans are trained at company schools in both Kenya and Tanzania.

Western Plains Arts Association is bringing internationally renowned Cirque Zuma Zuma to the Oakley High School Auditorium, at 3 p.m. CST, Sunday, Feb. 10. Admission is by WPAA season ticket or adults $20, students $10 at the door. This season’s performances are made possible through generous gifts by businesses and individuals throughout the area, including a special grant from the Dane G. Hansen Foundation, Logan, Kansas.

African Acrobats International, Inc., has established the ultimate African circus: the source for music, dance and ritual for all humanity. The thought of this rich continent brings in mind at once mysticism, magic and excitement. Some of the amazing entertainment audiences can expect from Cirque Zuma Zuma is: tribal dances, hula hoops, human pyramids, chair balancing, hoops diving, hand-to-hand balancing , foot juggling, poles, contortionist, tumbling and so much more. For additional information visit the group’s website: zumazuma.com.

One critic, Chris Griffin of DC Metro Theater Arts, wrote in April 2016: “As scientists continue to seek out new forms of alternative energy I would suggest they check out Cirque Zuma Zuma. From the time the troupe hits the stage they are dancing and don’t stop until their final bow….one of the things I really love about circus is when mere mortals do the seemingly impossible.”

— Submitted

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