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FHSU’s Meyer selected to run in Drake Relays Elite Mile

FHSU Track and Field

FHSU Athletics

DES MOINES, Iowa – Fort Hays State senior Brett Meyer has been selected to participate in the Elite Mile at the 2019 Drake Relays Presented by Hy-Vee. Meyer will face off against 12 of the top runners in the world in the prestigious race, including seven others that have shattered the 4-minute mark in the mile this year. The race is set to begin at 2:28 p.m. on Saturday (April 27).

Meyer is the lone collegiate competitor participating in the Elite Mile race this year. Additionally, he is the only sub-4 miler in NCAA Division II this season.

The Scott City, Kan. native broke the 4-minute mark last summer when he posted a time of 3.59.77 at the Festival of Miles in St. Louis, Mo., finishing sixth in a field of 14 runners that included several professionals.

Meyer has been running the 1500m during the outdoor season, picking up one of just four NCAA DII automatic qualifying times when he ran a 3:49.65 at altitude earlier this month at the Colorado Invitational. He is a five-time All-American, most recently finishing fourth in the mile at the 2019 NCAA Division II Indoor National Championships with a time of 4:12.31.

The Elite Invitational at the Drake Relays annually brings together some of the world’s greatest athletes to compete in 15 events. Through those disciplines, 34 of the participants have competed in the Olympics during their career.

Emma Jeanne Bradley

Emma Jeanne Bradley, 90, passed away April 25, 2019 at her home in Larned.

She was born April 15, 1929 in Larned to Horace Geoffrey and Mary Edith K. Shepherd Smith.

A lifetime area resident she was a nurse aide, a ward clerk, and a life-long care giver.

She was a member of the Escue Chapel CME, Red Hat Society, Black Heritage Club, and Tops, all of Larned. She served her church as a Sunday school teacher, church pianist, and church clerk, stewardess, and missionary.

On November 17, 1950 she married Roger Thomas Bradley in Larned. He died October 8, 1998.

Survivors include; children, Gina Bradley, Larned, Jo Kathan Bradley, Wichita, Patricia Bradley, Phillip J. Bradley, Becky Bradley, all of Larned, Marc D. (Rosa) Bradley Sr., Arvada, Colorado, Damon (Brenda) Bradley, Wichita, Pamela (Eddie) Byrd, Clarksville, Tennessee, Jay (Leslie) Bradley Sr., Christopher (Steffanie) Bradley Sr., Amy Bradley, all of Wichita; sister, Ella (George) Towns, Larned; twenty-two grandchildren; twenty-three great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Roger Bradley; son, Clayton E. Smith; daughter, Angela Bradley; five sisters Verna Scott, Edna Hart, Bernice Caro, Erma Smith, Eunice Smith; two brothers, Horace G. Smith, William Clayton Smith.

Funeral service will be held 11:00 a.m. Saturday, May 4th, 2019 at Beckwith Mortuary Chapel, Larned with Pastor Cameron Moore and Pastor Anthony Hill presiding. Visitation will be 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Friday May 3rd, 2019 at Beckwith Mortuary. Interment will be in Larned Cemetery.

Memorials may be given to Escue Chapel CME in care of Beckwith Mortuary, PO Box 477, Larned, KS 67550.

Police jail Kan. armed robbery suspects who zip tied employee

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an armed robbery and made an arrest.

McPherson photo Sedgwick Co.

Just before 10:20 a.m. Thursday, police were dispatched to an armed robbery at the Sprint store located in the 500 block of S. West Street in Wichita, according to officer Kevin Wheeler.

Upon arrival, officers contacted a sole employee who reported that two unknown males, one armed with a handgun, had robbed the store and zip tied him in a back room.

During the investigation officers had information on a possible suspect vehicle, which was described as a silver SUV.

Responding officers spotted a silver SUV in the area and attempted to stop the vehicle.  The vehicle failed to stop, and a short traffic pursuit ensued.  The suspect vehicle struck a box truck at Kellogg and Meridian and came to a rest off of the road.  Two occupants ran from the vehicle and were taken into custody by officers shortly after.

Lopez photo Sedgwick Co.
Police on the scene of Thursday’s chase, crash photo courtesy WICHway.org

Police questioned the two suspect and arrested 25-year-old Camarin McPherson and 26-year-old Xavier M. Lopez.

McPherson is being held on requested charges that include aggravated robbery, kidnapping, criminal possession of a firearm, flee and elude and drug possession, according to the Sedgwick County Jail records.

Lopez is being held for aggravated robbery.

The loss to the business was cash and merchandise belonging to the business.  There were no injuries to anyone, according to Wheeler. He did not release the name of the suspects.

 

 

Earl Ward

Earl Ward, of Hays, passed away on April 25, 2019.

Arrangements pending with Brock’s North Hill Chapel in Hays.

Kansas court bolsters abortion rights, blocks ban

By JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ highest court ruled for the first time Friday that the state constitution protects abortion rights and blocked a first-in-the-nation ban on a common second trimester method for ending pregnancies.

The state Supreme Court’s ruling represented a big victory for abortion rights supporters in a state with a Republican-controlled Legislature hostile to their cause. It comes with other, GOP-controlled states moving to ban most abortionsin direct challenges to the U.S. Supreme Court’s historic 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortions across the nation.

The Kansas decision prevents the state from enforcing a 2015 law that could have greatly limited second trimester abortions. But even worse for abortion opponents, the ruling clears the way for legal challenges to a string of abortion restrictions approved in recent years by state lawmakers under past Republican governors.

The court said vague language protecting “equal and inalienable rights” in the first section of the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights grants a “natural right of personal autonomy” that includes the right to “control one’s own body.” Because that right is independent of the U.S. Constitution, Kansas courts could strike down restrictions that have been upheld by the federal courts.

“This right allows a woman to make her own decisions regarding her body, health, family formation, and family life — decisions that can include whether to continue a pregnancy,” the court’s unsigned majority opinion said.

Justices ruled 6-1 on the language in state constitution. Justice Caleb Stegall, the only appointee of a conservative Republican governor, declared in his dissenting opinion that the ruling “fundamentally alters the structure of our government” to “arbitrarily grant a regulatory reprieve” for abortion.

The ruling immediately prompted abortion opponents to call for amending the state constitution. Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly, who took office in January, is a strong abortion-rights supporter, but the Legislature still has solid anti-abortion majorities.

“The liberal, activist Supreme Court showed just how out of touch they are with Kansas values,” Senate President Susan Wagle, a conservative Wichita Republican, said in a statement issued minutes after the decision. “We understand that life is sacred, beginning at conception, and we must always stand and defend the most vulnerable among us, the unborn.”

In previous cases, Kansas’ highest court avoided the question, allowing U.S. Supreme Court decisions to determine what restrictions would be allowed. But a state district court judge ruled in issuing an injunction to block the 2015 law that the Kansas Constitution grants its own protections.

The Supreme Court sent the case back to the lower court for a trial on the lawsuit challenging the law but kept the judge’s injunction in place, saying the lawsuit was likely to succeed in invalidating the law.

The decision Friday comes two years after the Kansas court heard arguments from attorneys, an unusually long delay for a ruling. Iowa’s Supreme Court issued a similar decisionin 2018.

The Kansas Bill of Rights says residents’ natural rights include “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” and that “free governments” were created for their “equal protection and benefit.”

The state’s attorneys argued there is no evidence that when the state constitution was written in 1859, its drafters contemplated abortion rights. In the Kansas Territory, abortion was illegal except to save a woman’s life, and that policy carried over in the new state’s laws.

The Kansas law at issue would bar physicians from using forceps or similar instruments on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces, using the non-medical term “dismemberment abortion” to describe the procedure. Such instruments are commonly used in dilation and evacuation procedure, which the Center for Reproductive Rights has described as the safest and most common abortion procedure in the U.S. in the second trimester.

The Kansas law was model legislation drafted by the National Right to Life Committee. The group says similar bans have been enacted in 10 other states — Oklahoma, West Virginia, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, Kentucky, Ohio and North Dakota.

Abortion providers reported performing 484 dilation and evacuation procedures in Kansas in 2018, according to state health department statistics. That was 6.9% of the state’s total abortions; most pregnancies were terminated during the first trimester.

The lawsuit against the Kansas law was filed by Drs. Herbert Hodes and Traci Nauser, a father and daughter who operated a women’s health center together in the Kansas City suburb of Overland Park. Hodes has since retired.

After the district judge’s ruling put the law on hold, the Kansas Court of Appeals split 7-7, allowing the judge’s decision to stand.

————–

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is preparing to rule on whether the state constitution protects abortion rights.

The court announced that it would issue a decision Friday in a lawsuit filed by two abortion providers in 2015 against a Kansas law banning a common second-trimester procedure.

A trial-court judge ruled that the state constitution’s Bill of Rights provides protections for abortion rights that are independent of protections under the U.S. Constitution.

If the Kansas Supreme Court agrees, state courts could invalidate abortion restrictions upheld by the federal courts. Such a decision also would likely spur an attempt from abortion opponents to amend the state constitution.

The law’s fate also is at issue. It was the first of its kind in the nation in 2015 but has yet to be enforced.

Drug Take Back Day will be Saturday in Ellis Co.

The Ellis County Drug Enforcement Unit is taking back unwanted prescription drugs at the Hays Convention & Visitor’s Bureau, 27th & Vine St. in Hays; the Ellis Police Department, 815 Jefferson St. in Ellis; and Victoria City Hall, 1005 4th St. in Victoria – on Saturday, April 27, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The Ellis Co. DEU and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration will give the public its 17th opportunity in nine years to prevent pill abuse and theft by ridding their homes of potentially dangerous expired, unused, and unwanted prescription drugs. Bring your pills for disposal to one of the above sites. (Sites cannot accept needles or sharps, only pills or patches and liquids in sealed containers.)

The service is free and anonymous, no questions asked.

6-year-old boy dies from injuries in Kansas ATV crash

LONGTON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say one of two brothers hurt in an all-terrain vehicle crash in rural southeast Kansas has died from his injuries.

Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper Rick Wingate identified the boy as 6-year-old Owen Cannon, of Longton. His 9-year-old brother was driving the ATV when it crashed into a pickup truck on April 18 while cresting a hill on an Elk County gravel road.

Both boys were flown away from the wreck. The truck driver wasn’t hurt. A GoFundMe says the older boy had a broken leg, while Owen had swelling on his brain and cracked vertebrae in his neck.

Wingate says the investigation is ongoing.

Anthony ‘Tony’ Souchek

Anthony “Tony” Souchek, 74, of Atwood, died Sunday, April 21, 2019 at Hays Medical Center. He was born March 31, 1945 in Stratton, Nebraska to Henry and Frances (Horinek) Souchek.

He was preceded in death by his parents; brother Gery Lee in 1966, and beloved partner Charlotte Findlay in 2006.

He is survived by his children, Jennifer, Decatur, TX and Jeremy (Jill), Fort Worth, TX; one grandchild, Mackenzie; his sisters, Marguerite Ward (Bob), Perth, Australia & Frances Ann Souchek, Colorado Springs, CO and brothers, Leonard Souchek (Doris), Payallup, WA, Marvin Souchek (Anne), Lincoln, NE and JD Souchek (Giovanna), Gainesville, VA.

Tony was disabled at barely 3 yrs of age, due to a farm accident, but this did not hinder him enjoying his life. Tony endured many surgeries on the growing lower leg bone in his formative years. Between surgeries and the healing process Tony was still able to help on the farm.

While the disability had its limitations, it did not stop him from activities like tubing down a mountain stream.
Tony spent years in the oil fields in Oklahoma, Louisiana and over 20 years in Northern Africa.
Golf, watching and especially playing, became his hobby. He played courses in Scotland, England, Spain and the States. Tony returned to Atwood in 2007 and joined the Country Club. He spent many happy days on the course and fun-filled nights with his friends at the clubhouse. Tony and Charlotte also enjoyed traveling the world and spent many years doing so.

Visitation will be 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 30, 2019, at Baalmann Mortuary, Atwood, with a Vigil at 7:00 p.m. A Funeral Service will be at 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, May 1, 2019, at Baalmann Mortuary, Atwood, with a private family burial to follow in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Atwood. Memorials can be made to the American Cancer Society. Online condolences: www.baalmannmortuary.com

New retirement home opens for old homeless dogs

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A new retirement home of sorts gives homeless senior dogs that don’t get adopted from shelters a place to romp and roam.

photo courtesy Shep’s Place Senior Dog Sanctuary GoFundMe

Shep’s Place Senior Dog Sanctuary opened about two weeks ago in the Kansas City suburb of Independence.

Founder Russell Clothier says that he came up with the idea after he started volunteering at shelters and saw elderly dogs never finding a new home. He decided the dogs need to be spending their “golden days in retirement.”

The sanctuary is named after a 10-year-old beagle-basset hound mix that Clothier adopted. It has kennels for around 20 dogs to be housed together and a large yard. Clothier says the sanctuary takes only dogs that “fall through the cracks” and can’t find a home through a shelter.

FHSU’s Lindell honored with MIAA Women’s Tennis Sportsmanship Award

FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer photo

FHSU Athletics

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – As the 2018-19 women’s tennis seasons comes to an end, the MIAA has announced this year’s All-Conference teams and awards. Fort Hays State’s Lauren Lindell earned the achievement of sharing the Sportsmanship Award for the year. The announcement, made Thursday (April 25) from the conference office, also named first, second and honorable-mention teams as well as other awards.

Lindell shares the honor with Claire Neil of Nebraska-Kearney and Sara Grozdanovic of Northwest Missouri State. She is the second Tiger in two years to earn this honor as Laura Jimenez-Lendinez captured the mention in 2017.

On the season, Lindell posted a 3-10 overall record in singles play and a 4-9 doubles mark. Lindell was a part of a Tigers squad which held a 3-10 record alongside a 0-8 MIAA mark.

Below is the 2019 All-MIAA Women’s Tennis Team.

2018-19 MIAA Women’s Tennis Awards and All-MIAA Teams
Co-Players of the Year: Adel-Byanu Abidullina – Central Oklahoma, Alexis Czapinski – Washburn
Freshman of the Year: Adel-Byanu Abidullina- Central Oklahoma
Coach of the Year: Lance Lysaught – Washburn
Sportsmanship Awards: Lauren Lindell – Fort Hays State, Claire Neil – Nebraska Kearney, Sara Grozdanovic – Northwest Missouri

First-Team
No. 1 Singles – Adel-Byanu Abidullina- Central Oklahoma
No. 2 Singles – Alexis Czapinski – Washburn
No. 3 Singles – Paola Landin – Central Oklahoma
No. 4 Singles – Maria Soler Valverde – Washburn
No. 5 Singles – Svea Crohn – Washburn
No. 6 Singles – Sara Grozdanovic – Northwest Missouri, Sarah Van Eeckhoudt – Central Oklahoma
No. 1 Doubles – Alexis Czapinski and Logan Morrissey – Washburn
No. 2 Doubles – Adel-Byanu Abidullina and Nikki Boyar – Central Oklahoma
No. 3 Doubles – Sarah Van Eeckhoudt and Alix Williams – Central Oklahoma
Includes Ties In Voting

Second-Team
No. 1 Singles – Tatjana Stoll – Northeastern State
No. 2 Singles – Mayra Jovic – Northeastern State
No. 3 Singles –  Marta Ferrando – Northwest Missouri, Klara Vickov – Southwest Baptist
No. 4 Singles – Diana Cabrera – Southwest Baptist
No. 5 Singles – Karla Tomaic – Northeastern State
No. 6 Singles – Silvana Caceres – Emporia State
No. 1 Doubles – Tatjana Stoll and Mayra Jovic – Northeastern State
No. 2 Doubles – Jacqueline Engelbrecht and Svea Crohn – Washburn
No. 3 Doubles – Camryn Parnell and Claire Neil – Nebraska Kearney
Includes Ties In Voting

Honorable Mentions
No. 1 Singles – Jill Van den Dungen – Southwest Baptist
No. 2 Singles – Isabella Dunlap – Central Oklahoma, Irene Recuenco – Northwest Missouri
No. 4 Singles – Kirtana Bhat – Central Oklahoma, Julia Aliseda – Northwest Missouri
No. 5 Singles – Nikki Boyar – Central Oklahoma, Julie Rinderknech – Northwest Missouri
No. 6 Singles – Madison Lysaught – Washburn
No. 1 Doubles – Isabella Dunlap and Paola Landin – Central Oklahoma, Tania Teruel and Marta Ferrando – Northwest Missouri, Jill Van den Dungen and Klara Vickov – Southwest Baptist
No. 2 Doubles – Viktoria Mackova and Karen Santiago – Emporia State, Irene Recuenco and Julia Aliseda – Northwest Missouri
No. 3 Doubles – Silvana Caceres and Shannen Meyer – Emporia State, Melissa Vera and Emma Warnock – Northeastern State, Julie Rinderknech and Sara Grozdanovic – Northwest Missouri

P-burg student earns scholarship for exchange student program in Japan

Weishaar
RESTON, Va. — Annie Weishaar, a member of the Phillipsburg High School Family, Career and Community Leaders of America Chapter, has been selected to receive one of just 14 scholarships of the 2019 FCCLA Japanese Exchange, sponsored by the Kikkoman Corp. and FCCLA.

The exchange scholarship, worth more than $11,000, is for the FCCLA members to travel to Japan for four to six weeks as an exchange student.

“Part of the application included writing many different essays explaining my interest in studying in Japan, as well as my ideas about what I could contribute to the program. I also had to interview over Skype,” Weishaar said. “I am excited to be dropped into a culture with other students my age and get the opportunity to use the language I have been learning.

Plainville rallies around injured brothers; poker run set for Saturday

Heather Werner with Jeremy Werner, Kylee Shae and Brandon Werner at Craig Hospital. Courtesy photo

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

The Plainville community has rallied around a local family who experience two tragedies in the matter of three months.

Plainville native Brandon Werner, the son of Rick and Karen Werner, was in a car accident near his home in Colorado. He was thrown about 90 feet from the vehicle and received a severe head injury, said family friend Rhonda Wolf. Brandon suffered two strokes, which left him partially paralyzed on his left side. He has also experienced difficulty with his speech.

Brandon, who is in his 30s, had no insurance, so his mother and father moved to Colorado to care for him.

Friends conducted a series of fundraisers for the family, including a soup supper that raised more than $7,700 in two hours.

“The Plainville community has been totally amazing,” Wolf said. “They sure come out like crazy to help their people.”

On March 23, Jeremy — Brandon’s younger brother — was in involved in a multiple motorcycle crash in Atlanta at the American Flat Track Races. He was paralyzed from the chest down. Jeremy is currently in rehab at Craig Hospital in Colorado, about an hour and a half from his brother.

The doctors are unsure of what Jeremy’s final prognosis will be.

He has a bruised spinal cord that has been labeled a “complete” injury. Spinal cord injuries take six months to a year to heal.

“He has regained stable sensation in his right ankle, so time will tell, but the family and community are hopeful,” said Kylee Shae, Jeremy’s girlfriend.

Jeremy works for Stahl Products in Plainville, and Wolf said the company has gone out of its way to help the family during this crisis.

Karen, a nurse, has had to take leave from her job to help care for her sons, Wolf said. Rick Werner works in the oilfield and has someone temporarily filling in for him.

Friends of the Werners are selling T-shirts and other items, proceeds of which are going to help the family. More information on these items can be found on the WernerStrong Facebook page.

On Saturday, the Free Tomorrow Motorcycle Club is sponsoring the Friends of the Werner Family Benefit Run. The poker run will begin at Westins in Stockton. Registration will be from noon to 1 p.m. Start time will be 1 p.m.

The first hand will cost $15. Additional hands will cost $5 each. The run will go from Westins in Stockton to Lucky Lady in Osborne to Roadside Park in Luray to Fossil Station in Russell and will end at the Burgers and Beer in Plainville. The special at the Burgers and Beer Saturday night will be prime rib.

All vehicles are welcome. Last vehicles need to be in by 5 p.m.

To make monetary donations, send them to Jeff Miller, 800 S. Broadway, Plainville, KS 67663. Make checks payable to Rick Werner.

For more information, contact Rusty at 785-302-0070 or Gary at 785-543-1874.

Helen Joyce Govert

Helen Joyce Govert, age 88, passed away on Wednesday, April 24, 2019 at Greeley County Long Term Care in Tribune, Kansas. Helen was born June 9, 1930 in Arkansas City, Kansas, the youngest of nine children, to Arthur & Pearl (Bundy) Leach.

Helen graduated from Arkansas City High School in 1948, attended Arkansas City Junior College and later graduated from Fort Hays State University with a Bachelors Degree in Education. She taught elementary school in a one-room schoolhouse in rural Sumner County, Kansas.

At a fortuitous blind date, Helen met Joseph “Joe” John Govert, Jr. and they were later married on May 31, 1955 at Hays, Kansas. Helen’s sense of humor counterbalanced Joe’s seriousness for over sixty-one years, with Joe’s passing on June 3, 2016 at Tribune, Kansas.

In 1956, the couple relocated to Greeley County, Kansas to farm and raise their family, establishing Govert Construction in 1957. Helen briefly worked at the Greeley County Public Library and operated a porcelain doll studio, Exquizit Creations, with her friend Alice Robertson from 1989 through 2008.

Helen was an active volunteer, an avid reader and spirited storyteller, regularly being asked to give book reviews at community events. She enjoyed welcoming new residents to the community, with her friend Marge Kuttler as part of the Welcome Wagon. She enjoyed sharing her passion for drawing, painting and porcelain dolls with 4-H students, staffing Sacks on Broadway and as a member of the Pride Committee. Helen was a member of St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church in Tribune, Kansas, serving as Sacristan in assisting in setting up for services at the church and Extraordinary Minister of the Eucharist, providing communion to the homebound.

Helen’s surviving family includes-

Three Children and their spouses-
Mike & Cathy Govert- Tribune, Kansas
Kevin & Cindy Govert- Tribune, Kansas
Sara & Gene Greeson- Tribune, Kansas

Nine grandchildren and eleven great grandchildren.

Her parent, husband four brothers and four sisters preceded her in death.

Her family cherishes Helen in a million different ways, all because she was a loving wife, mother and grandmother and great grandmother.

Vigil services will be held at 7:00 p.m. (MDT) Sunday, April 28, 2018 at St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church in Tribune, Kansas.

Funeral Mass will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday, April 29. 2019 at the church with Fathers Tim Hickey and Benjamin Martin officiating.

Burial will be in Greeley County Cemetery in Tribune, Kansas.

Friends may call from 2:00 until 5:00 pm Sunday at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Tribune, Kansas.

Memorials may be given to the Greeley County Library in care of the funeral home.

Condolences may be sent to the family through the funeral home website at priceandsons.com

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