The Hays Good Samaritan Society is having a Halloween Trunk or Treat event at the Senior Living Facility parking lot, 2710 Canal Blvd., Hays, starting at 2 p.m. and ending at 5 p.m. on Oct. 31.
Month: October 2019
Sheriff: 2 dead after train, car crash in Kansas
ATCHISON COUNTY — Two people died in an accident Wednesday in Atchison County.
Deputies responded just before midnight to the intersection of River Road and 244th in rural Atchison County, according to a media release from the sheriff’s department.
A train traveling approximately 45 miles per hour struck a 2015 Hyundai Elanta that was stopped on the tracks.
First responders found Jeremy W. McAfee, 34, Savanah, Mo., outside the vehicle and Allison L. Richardson, 34, Platte City, Mo. inside, according to the release.
Richardson was pronounced dead at the scene. EMS transported McAfee to the hospital in Atchison where he died.
The Post Podcast: FHSU Band and Choirs set to perform Friday
Lincoln teacher finalist for national math, science award

Kansas Department of Education
TOPEKA – Four Kansas educators are being recognized for their outstanding teaching skills through the prestigious Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching (PAEMST) program.
The White House Office of Science Technology Policy (OSTP) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2019, that Heidi Albin, Complete High School Maize (CHSM), Maize Unified School District 266; Monica Dreiling, Lincoln Elementary School, Hays USD 489; Sarah Rand, Central Heights Elementary School, Central Heights USD 288; and Stephen Smith, Christa McAuliffe K-8 Academy, Wichita USD 259, are among 215 individuals being presented with the honor.
Albin and Smith were named national finalists for 2017, and Rand and Dreiling were named national finalists for 2018. The 2017 and 2018 national finalists weren’t named by OSTP and NSF until Oct. 15, 2019.
The Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching, which was established in 1983 by Congress, is presented annually to outstanding K-12 science and mathematics teachers from across the country.
Nominees complete a rigorous application process that requires them to demonstrate their excellence in content knowledge and ability to adapt to a broad range of learners and teaching environments. Winners are selected by a panel of distinguished scientists, mathematicians and educators following an initial selection process done at the state level.
Each year, the award alternates between educators teaching kindergarten through sixth grade and those teaching seventh through 12th grades.
Dreiling has been an educator for more than 20 years, teaching fifth-grade science and language arts for the past five years at Lincoln Elementary School. She also has taught special education for 15 years at Lincoln Elementary, LaCrosse Elementary and Ruppenthal Middle School, Russell County USD 407. Dreiling has been an adjunct instructor at Fort Hays State University for 12 years.
She has been awarded numerous grants, which have created unique science learning opportunities, including an engineering unit to create a prosthetic leg for an injured dog and an intergenerational STEM partnership with assisted-living residents.
Dreiling received a bachelor’s degree in elementary education and a master’s degree in cross-categorical special education from Fort Hays State University. She is certified in kindergarten through ninth-grade elementary education and K-12 special education. She has endorsements for ESOL, gifted and building leadership. Dreiling is a National Board Certified Teacher.
“The Presidential Award is an immense honor. This prestigious award could not have been achieved without inspiration, guidance and encouragement from students, their families, colleagues and my own family,” Dreiling said. “These individuals, combined with a supportive work environment, are truly a blessing! Receiving this award further ignites my passion for teaching and validates that all students can successfully engage in rigorous lessons that increase confidence and cultivate an interest in science.”
Albin has spent the past 10 years as the science teacher and character education coordinator at CHSM. She co-authored “186 Days of Character,” a year-long character education curriculum that is freely distributed across Kansas. Albin also successfully implemented a facility therapy dog program at her school, helped CHSM receive recognition as a Kansas Association of Conservation and Environmental Education Green School of the Year and established a handicap accessible community garden.
Albin serves on the board of directors for WILD KS and has written and implemented curriculum for fishing, wilderness survival and camping. She also is a 2017 Milken Educator.
She has a bachelor’s degree in cellular molecular biology and a master’s in secondary education from Fort Hays State University with certifications in biology, chemistry, agriculture and earth and space science.
“Receiving the Presidential Award means that I have the responsibility to represent teachers well and help other teachers reach their goals,” Albin said. “The award places me in a position to serve the profession and step up in any way I can to help others. I also see this award as a reflection not of myself, but of my school and fellow staff members. The staff at Complete High School Maize have all dedicated their lives to helping struggling students and I am in awe of their passion and commitment.”
Smith has been an educator for 22 years. He worked at Christa McAuliffe K-8 Academy in Wichita for seven years before recently joining the staff at Allison Traditional Magnet Middle School, also in Wichita USD 259, as a technology teacher. He also spent 15 years teaching second through fifth grade at McLean Science and Technology Magnet School, Wichita USD 259. He has written computer applications and developed project-based learning activities to engage his students in math.
Smith has coached LEGO and VEX Robotics and works with Wichita State University to lead robotics summer camps. He earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration with a computer science minor; a bachelor’s in elementary education; and a master of education in curriculum and instruction – all from Wichita State University. He is certified in middle school math, elementary education, English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), technology education and is a National Board Certified Teacher.
“Receiving the Presidential Award is not so much a recognition of my accomplishments, but a celebration of those who have invested, guided, and inspired me to be a life-long learner,” Smith said. “Each day, I stand in the company of dedicated, hard-working and talented teachers who challenge and encourage me to be my very best. I strive to provide that same motivation to the students I teach. Being recognized for this is truly an honor!”
Rand has taught at Central Heights Elementary School for the past five years. She spent her first three years in education teaching second grade at Success Academy Charter Schools in New York City, where she was trained in Cognitively Guided Instruction (CGI).
Rand started her career at Central Heights as the Title I math teacher. In this position, she has visited kindergarten through fifth-grade classrooms daily to teach CGI. For the past four years, she has served as a third-grade teacher. Rand has served on the math curriculum selection committee and co-wrote her district’s Science Curriculum Map. She also is a member of the District Improvement Team.
Rand received a bachelor’s degree in human resources from Ottawa University and a master of arts in teaching from the University of Southern California. She is a certified elementary school teacher with an endorsement in ESOL.
“This award is validation for my belief in children; they will succeed in mathematics if given the right problems to solve in their own way in an environment where it is safe to take risks,” Rand said. “It is a tribute to all my students who have done just that and taught me so much. It is a testament to the phenomenal teachers I’ve observed and the mentors I’ve been lucky to have. The Presidential Award is an incredible, humbling honor and recognition for teaching in a way about which I feel so passionate.”
Winners of this Presidential honor receive a $10,000 award from NSF to be used at their discretion. Finalists also are invited to Washington, D.C., for an awards ceremony and several days of educational and celebratory events, including visits with members of Congress and the Administration.
Since 1983, more than 5,000 teachers have been recognized for their contributions in the classroom and to their profession.
For more information about PAEMST, visit www.paemst.org. For a list of all awardees, visit https://www.paemst.org/recognition.
Missing man found alive a week after car crash in Kansas City

KANSAS CITY(AP) — A 37-year-old man who had been missing for a week is hospitalized after being found in a wrecked car at the bottom of a ravine.
Lee’s Summit police say a dirt bike rider found Ryan Linneman, of Lee’s Summit, Wednesday evening in the wreckage along Interstate 470 in Kansas City.
Linneman was taken to a hospital with critical injuries. Lee’s Summit police spokesman Sgt. Chris Depue says he did not have an updated condition report Thursday.

Police asked the public for help finding Linneman after he was last seen driving his car on Oct. 9.
The crash investigators determined Linneman’s car ran off of Interstate 470 and went down a 50-foot incline. The vehicle landed in a gully that was obscured from the view of passing motorists.
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Kan. construction firm avoids losses of $276K in forged checks
Salina Post
SALINE COUNTY —Numerous locations across the United States have received checks purported to be from Frisbie Construction.
The problem is that Frisbie Construction, 7793 East Kansas Highway 4, didn’t send the checks.
Those who received the checks were told to send a text a number confirming they had received the checks, according toSaline County Sheriff’s Captain Jim Hughes.
The number was not a Salina phone number or a Frisbie Construction phone number.
Persons who texted then received a text back asking which check it was and for what amount, according to Hughes and it was not clear how the check forgers actually made money off the scam.
Frisbie Construction officials told Salina Post that so far, counterfeit Frisbie checks had been received in 19 states and the District of Columbia between Sept. 9 and Monday.
Twenty-eight checks totaling $99,956.40 were actually presented to recipients’ banks, however, Frisbie Construction’s bank, UMB, declined payment on the checks, according to Frisbie Construction officials.
Additionally, Frisbie Construction received 49 phone calls during that period from people wondering why they were receiving the checks.
In fact, the first phone call the company received was the first notification that anything was amiss and allowed Frisbie Construction to notify UMB about the situation before any checks were presented for payment, thus allowing the company to avoid losing any money, the company told Salina Post. The checks associated with those 49 phone calls totaled $176,928.53, Frisbie Construction officials told Salina Post.
The company said that some of the checks looked more professional than others, but all had the same clear signature. Additionally, checks were all different colors, the company noted.
Hughes said that some sort of data breach is suspected, but officials have yet to determine where that breach happened.
2 injured after explosion at Cargill plant in Dodge City
FORD COUNTY — Authorities are investigating the cause of an explosion that injured employees at the Cargill plant in Dodge City early Thursday.
The explosion was in a small stand-alone building at the protein facility and two employees are being treated for burns, according to a statement from Cargill.
As a precaution, production at the plant was suspended for the day. Cargill authorities released no additional details.
Lawmakers: Sex-trafficked Kansas teen’s story is ‘heartbreaking’

Rep. Russ Jennings, R-Larkin, chair of the Joint Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice, said the Kansas child welfare system has long been ‘deeply troubled.’ Evert Nelson / The Topeka-Capital-Journal
By PEGGY LOWE & SHERMAN SMITH
Kansas News Service
From cries of heartbreak to a call for the prosecution of men who pay for sex with girls, Kansas lawmakers said the story of Hope Zeferjohn, a teen victim of sex-trafficking who was prosecuted for sex crimes, focuses a harsh light on a state system that is supposed to protect children.
This week, KCUR and the Topeka Capital-Journal published an investigative series profiling Zeferjohn’s journey from runaway, to the sex trade, to incarceration. The stories also reported the prosecution of a dozen other girls who had run away from state custody, were sex-trafficked and then prosecuted for sex crimes.
“My heart breaks for these children,” said Sen. Richard Hilderbrand, a Republican from Galena. “Our system has failed at the one thing that it is supposed to do, and that is to protect our children.”
The series outlined how Zeferjohn, then 14, met her boyfriend, Anthony “Angel” Long, a decade older than her, and fell under his control while still living with her family in Topeka. After she was placed into state custody, Long found her in a Salina foster home by calling authorities and pretending to be Zeferjohn’s father, she said. Zeferjohn ran away when she was 15 and Long began prostituting her.
“How can we allow a child predator to trick our system into giving them the location of one of our children?” Hilderbrand said. “What steps have we taken to make sure that this never happens again? These questions have to be answered and have to be fixed.”
Because Zeferjohn recruited other girls for Long’s prostitution ring, she was convicted of aggravated sex trafficking. She is serving a six-year sentence in the Topeka Correctional Facility and must be on the sex-offender registry for life. Zeferjohn is seeking a pardon from Gov. Laura Kelly, and on Wednesday, the Kansas City Star and the Topeka Capital-Journal editorial boards called for Kelly to give Zeferjohn clemency.
Rep. Stephanie Clayton, an Overland Park Democrat, said law enforcement should instead focus on the men paying for sex with a child.
“If we’re going to be spending that money on prison bed space, I don’t know, gosh, how about we start incarcerating the johns?” Clayton said. “Let’s incarcerate the complete and total garbage people that are having sex with 15-year-olds. Because they need to be put away. They’re the problem. They’re terrible people. I have no sympathy for that.”
Last year, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt launched a public awareness campaign to discourage paid sex. His spokesman, CJ Grover, on Wednesday renewed the call to prosecute buyers.
“The driving force behind commercial sexual exploitation, including sex trafficking, is the demand for commercial sex,” Grover said. “Buyers who create that demand must be held accountable for their role in enabling sex trafficking and other forms of commercial sexual exploitation. The attorney general would be supportive of more local prosecutions of buyers.”
An increase in runaways from the state’s foster care system stems from the policies of former Gov. Sam Brownback. After he took office in 2011, the foster care population ballooned from 5,200 to nearly 7,500. Child placement agencies struggled to recruit homes for the additional children, leading to an increase in runaways who didn’t find the care they needed.

Then-Gov. Sam Brownback (center) of Kansas poses with the Zeferjohn family on May 22, 2015, to kick off ‘Family Reunification Month.’ Terry Zeferjohn, Hope’s father, is in the back row, left, and four Zeferjohn children are in the front row. Kansas Department for Children and Families photo
In 2015, Brownback staged a photo op with the Zeferjohn family to tout his administration’s efforts to reunite families. Hope Zeferjohn was missing from the photo because the 16-year-old was already under the control of Long, who is now serving a 35-year prison sentence.
Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, said the photo op was a typical example of how Brownback’s administration operated.
“They were taking credit for things they really didn’t understand, nor did they really accomplish what they were taking credit for,” Hensley said. “I think that’s a perfect example.”
Also Wednesday, a legislative committee heard about the “deeply troubled” child welfare system in Kansas. Lawmakers were told that reforms made in 2017 moved troubled kids into foster care, where those with severe behaviors are hurting other kids, destroying property and scaring away foster families.
Two state foster care providers said this new influx of children has severely overwhelmed an already taxed system, leaving a chaotic situation where kids are sleeping in offices and providers are wondering if they can ever find them a home.
“We have seen traumatic, tragic events that keep me awake at night,” said Rachel Marsh of Saint Francis Ministries, one of the foster care providers, in testimony before a joint committee on corrections and juvenile justice oversight.
“The child welfare system in Kansas is deeply troubled,” said Rep. Russ Jennings, R-Larkin, chairman of the legislative panel. “But trouble within the child welfare system is not news.”
Problems with foster care in Kansas have existed for years, Jennings said, and the situation hasn’t improved.
Sen. Molly Baumgardner, R-Louisburg, said she is still bothered by the large number of runaways from the foster care system, which came to light two years ago. She also was unhappy that state officials aren’t providing lawmakers with updates on the number of runaways and locations where it is happening.
The problems within the child welfare system happen because state and local agencies aren’t working together, Baumgardner said.
“We have our schools are not working with our foster program, are not working with law enforcement, and so we have silos, and those silos need to be getting together, working together to serve our kids,” she said.
This story is part of a partnership between KCUR and The Topeka Capital-Journal, with support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in collaboration with APM Reports, the investigative reporting unit of American Public Media.
Peggy Lowe is a reporter at KCUR. She’s on Twitter @peggyllowe.
Sherman Smith is a reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal. He’s on Twitter at @sherman_news.
Mary Lou Odle
Mary Lou Odle, 74, passed away Sunday, Oct. 13, 2019, at her home. She was born July 15, 1945, in Beloit, the daughter of Paul and Susan (Gasper) Zimmer. She married Terry Odle, June 1, 1981 in Salina.
Mary Lou graduated from Downs High School and earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Fort Hays State University in Home Economics Education and a Master of Science from Kansas State University in Adult Education. Mary Lou taught high school in Plainville and was a Kansas State Research and Extension agent in Russell County before accepting a similar position in 1978 in Salina. She retired in 2012 after 34 years in that position.
Mary Lou was the embodiment of service above self. She served for many years, both before and after retirement, as a counselor for Senior Health Insurance Counseling of Kansas. The quilting arts were one of her special interests and she was active in the Salina Silver Needles Quilt Guild and also served on the Advisory Council of Salina Senior Services. In 2009, she was honored with a Greater Salina Community Foundation Women of Achievement Award. She won the 1999 Communications Award from the Kansas Extension Association of Family and Consumer Sciences for one of her columns in the Salina Journal.
After retiring, Mary Lou enjoyed trips to Stockton where she and Terry had a second home and a farming operation. Mary Lou was a member of Sacred Heart Catholic Parish of Salina where she was active in Altar Society and other church ministries.
In addition to her husband, Terry, she is survived by: her stepson, David Odle (Kim) of Salina; brother, Terry Zimmer (Valerie) of Salina; sisters, Rita Holling (Ron) of Alton, and Joan Drees (Larry) of Ellinwood; brother and sister-in-law, Ted Odle (Jean) of McPherson, and Tammy Goering (Greg) of McPherson; nieces and nephews, Mark Holling (Shannon) of Alton, Mary Ellen Beck (Rob) of Stockton, Kathy Holling of Kensington, Jeff Holling (Beth) of Glen Elder, Michael Drees (Arielle) of Hays, Sarah Liebll of Hutchinson, Angie Mendez (Manny) of Topeka, Trenton Goering (Danielle) of Manhattan, and Taylor Goering of Galva.
She was preceded in death by: her parents; brother, Max; and nephew, Jeremy Zimmer.
Visitation will be 4-8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 17, at Ryan Mortuary, Salina. Family will greet friends beginning at 6 p.m., with a Vigil Service at 7 p.m.
Mass of Christian Burial will be at 11 a.m. Friday, Oct. 18, at Sacred Heart Cathedral, Salina. Burial will be at a later date in the Stockton Cemetery.
Memorials may be made to: the Saline County 4-H Development Fund, or Sacred Heart Cathedral, in care of Ryan Mortuary.
Sheriff: Kansas woman remains jailed for alleged animal cruelty

OSAGE COUNTY—Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for alleged animal cruelty.
Last weekend, the Osage County Sheriff’s office issued a public warning about dogs that were reported loose west of Lyndon, according to Sheriff Laurie Dunn.
She said the Alaskan Tundra Shepherds in question had been moved and authorities did not know where. All the dogs were moved from the property, according to the owner’s attorney.
On Wednesday, deputies arrested Christi Lynne Shaffer, 53, of Lyndon, Kansas, who is the owner of the emaciated dogs, according to Dunn. Shaffer remains in custody on 20 counts of cruelty to animals and 3 counts of permitting a dangerous animal to be at large.
The sheriff’s office released no additional details early Thursday.
Johnie Thompson
Johnie Thompson, better known as Jalene Bearly.
Born April/22/1936 in Vinita, Oklahoma to Luther Bryant and Esther Miles, Died Oct/12/2019 In Tulsa OK.
She Married Leslie Bearly in 1958, they were married 51 years, until his passing in 2009. Then she Married Chester Thompson in 2011. She Had 2 children: Don Bearly spouse Rebekah of Raytown, Mo and Penny Peabody and spouse Mike Peabody of Dayton, NV and their son Kyle, Jalene’s only grandchild.
She was always proud of her Cherokee Ancestry, she was a member of the First Families of the Cherokee nation through Sequoyah, Maj George Lowery Sr and Chief Richard Fields. She enjoyed many hobbies including sewing and crating costumes for penny’s competitions for modeling, dancing and baton twirling.
She worked as a nurse’s aide at the Larnard State hospital and in Ottawa, KS. She did bead work. She was a cub scouts den mother, she was also a seamstress, did upholstery and Interior Design. She supported her son and daughter in their many activities throughout her life. She passed into heaven being a beloved wife and mother. She is survied by both her children and grandson and Chester Thompson.
Graveside service will be 2:00 p.m. Thursday, October 17, 2019 at Belpre Cemetery, Belpre, Kansas. Arrangements by Beckwith Mortuary, PO Box 477, Larned, Kansas 67550. Personal condolences may be left at www.beckwithmortuary.com.
Police find 144 pounds of meth hidden in tires at Kansas City home
KANSAS CITY (AP) — Federal prosecutors say police seized 144 pounds of methamphetamine in tires stored at a shed at a Kansas City man’s home.
The man, 38-year-old Jorge Rodriquez-Gonzalez, was charged this week in U.S. District Court with drug trafficking.
Charging documents allege a confidential source bought a minimum of one kilogram of meth from Rodriguez-Gonzalez at least five days a week.
Prosecutors said that on Oct. 10, Rodriguez-Gonzalez was arrested after showing up for a drug buy with his wife and two young children. Police confiscated weapons, vehicles and drugs, including the methamphetamine inside four tires in a shed near Rodriquez-Gonzales’s home.
Court records show Rodriguez-Gonzalez told authorities he lived where the drugs were found but didn’t know how the tires got into his shed.
KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 10/17/19
Q: Why did the scientist go to the tanning salon?
A: Because he was a paleontologist.
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