NCK Tech Culinary and Business students are offering an Oktoberfest Drive Thru in Hays.
The drive thru booth, located on south Main St., across from Municipal Park, will be offering bierocks, bratwurst, green bean dumpling soup and spitzbuben. NCK Tech Culinary students prepare all the dishes.
Pre-orders are now being accepted by calling 785-625-2437. Deadline for pre-orders is 4:00 p.m. Friday, October 4 and can be picked up from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. on Friday, October 11 on south Main Street. Signs will be posted.
The drive thru booth will be open on Oktoberfest (Friday, October 11) from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and menu will be available while supplies last.
Business students from NCK Tech will be assisting taking orders and running the booth. Oktoberfest T-Shirts will also be available for pre-order or at the drive thru booth. All proceeds from the Oktoberfest drive thru will benefit NCK TECH students. For more information contact NCK Tech, Hays Campus at 785-625-2437.
NCK Tech Culinary and Business students are offering an Oktoberfest Drive Thru in Hays.
The drive thru booth, located on south Main St., across from Municipal Park, will be offering bierocks, bratwurst, green bean dumpling soup and spitzbuben. NCK Tech Culinary students prepare all the dishes.
Pre-orders are now being accepted by calling 785-625-2437. Deadline for pre-orders is 4:00 p.m. Friday, October 4 and can be picked up from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. on Friday, October 11 on south Main Street. Signs will be posted.
The drive thru booth will be open on Oktoberfest (Friday, October 11) from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and menu will be available while supplies last.
Business students from NCK Tech will be assisting taking orders and running the booth. Oktoberfest T-Shirts will also be available for pre-order or at the drive thru booth. All proceeds from the Oktoberfest drive thru will benefit NCK TECH students. For more information contact NCK Tech, Hays Campus at 785-625-2437.
The rain actually started Monday, Sept. 30 with 0.19 inches recorded at the K-State Agricultural Research Center late in the day. It was also warm with the high temperature reaching 92 degrees.
As a cold front moved in, Tuesday’s high was 73 degrees with another 0.75 inches of rain falling throughout the day. The two-day total is 0.94 inches.
So far this year Hays has received 27.06 inches of moisture. The average total by the end of October is 21.26 inches.
KANSAS CITY, KAN. – A federal jury found a Kansas woman guilty of taking part in a scheme to swindle homeowners facing foreclosure with false promises to help them save their homes, according to U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister.
Sara Cordry, 69, Overland Park, Kan., was convicted on one count of conspiracy, one count of mail fraud and six counts of wire fraud.
During trial, prosecutors presented evidence that Cordry conspired with co-defendants to take money from victims by fraudulently promising to lower their interest rates, lower their monthly payments. and help them obtain loan modifications.
Investigators identified more than 500 victims in 24 states who suffered a total loss of more than $1 million due to the scheme.
Co-defendants include Tyler Korn, 30, St. Ann, Mo., who was sentenced to 51 months in federal prison, Ruby Price, 74, Bonner Springs, Kan., who is awaiting sentencing and Amjad Daud, 35, Lutz, Fla., who failed to appear at court hearings. A warrant for his arrest has been issued.
Cordry’s sentencing is set for Jan. 9, 2020. She could face up to 30 years in federal prison and a fine up to $1 million on each count.
TOPEKA – For the next two months, the Kansas Department of Revenue’s Division of Vehicles will intermittently close driver’s license offices across the state for regional training meetings. These will close offices for one day by region. The purpose is to improve consistency across the state in customer service and process training.
“Our goal is to ensure adequate and consistent training for an improved customer service experience at our offices across the state,” David Harper, Director of Vehicles, said.
The driver’s license offices will be closed as follows on their respective dates:
October 7 – Sedgwick County Region
Wichita, Derby, Andover, Winfield
October 9 – East Region
Atchison, Baxter Springs, Chanute, Ft. Scott, Independence, Iola, Leavenworth, Ottawa, Parsons, Pittsburg
October 14 – Johnson and Wyandotte Counties
Kansas City, Mission, Olathe, Overland Park
November 6 – Shawnee & Douglas Counties
Lawrence, Topeka
November 13 – West Region
Colby, Dodge City, Garden City, Great Bend, Hays, Liberal, Phillipsburg, Pratt, Scott City
November 18 – Central Region
Concordia, Emporia, Hutchinson, Junction City, Manhattan, McPherson, Salina, Seneca
As the calendar turns to October and a political circus fully envelops D.C., it’s important to remember there’s an election on the horizon that’s not the 2020 presidential referendum.
In November Kansans will head to the polls and cast ballots for school board members and city councilors. Voters also will have a say on borrowing money for new schools, increasing sales tax and other measures.
In short, November’s election is more consequential for the day-to-day lives of most Kansans than anything that happens in 2020. Not only are the stakes higher for your everyday living, your vote will likely have an outsized impact on the election.
For example, in my home county 65 percent of eligible voters cast 22,198 ballots in the 2016 general election. Fewer than 6,000 voters turned out for 2015’s local races. That increased slightly in 2017 to just over 8,000, which is still less than a quarter of registered voters. The smaller the turnout, the more heft your individual vote will carry.
Now’s the time to get registered and get educated. U.S. citizens living in Kansas who will turn 18 before Election Day must submit their registration applications to their county election officer by Oct. 15 to be eligible for the Nov. 5 election.
The Kansas Secretary of State’s website (www.sos.ks.gov/elections) provides a trove of information about how and where to register; lists of candidates and deadlines for in-person advance voting, Oct. 16-Nov. 4; applying for and returning advance ballots via mail by Oct. 29; and when mail ballots must be postmarked, Nov. 5, and received by the county election office, no later than three days after the election.
As for getting to know the candidates, I’ve always thought it’s much easier to do in local elections than at the state and federal level. There’s no party politics to sort through since all school boards and most municipal elections are nonpartisan. The candidates also tend to be less political and more service minded, especially considering most positions offer nothing or next to it in the way of compensation.
Plus, especially in small towns, you already know the candidates. You go to church together, sit next to each other at Friday night ball games and, possibly, went to school together. For those election seekers you may not be as familiar with, there are plenty of resources. Local newspapers and radio stations will provide standard coverage of candidates, civic groups will hold forums and the candidates often have websites or social media pages detailing their backgrounds and the issues important for them.
While all of those methods will certainly help inform your vote, the very best practice is to question candidates directly. Whether you are worried about taxes, spending, public safety or have some other concern, candidates’ answers are often illuminating of how they’ll govern. Be wary of anyone who refuses or deflects from direct, relevant inquiries. If they don’t provide straightforward answers when seeking your vote, how can you trust they’ll be responsive to your inquiries if they’re elected?
I know why local elections are less popular than state and federal contests. There’s less partisanship and rancor. It often seems like there’s less on the line, even though that couldn’t be further from the truth. No matter your politics, the system works best with an engaged and educated electorate.
I’ll be at the ballot box this November. I hope to see you there, too.
“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.
Ellis County Noxious Weed Department is beginning their annual chemical container recycling collection. Only empty, clean, triple-rinsed chemical containers will be accepted now until October 31, at no charge.
For further information, contact Ellis County Noxious Weed Department, 1197 280th Avenue, Hays, at 785.682.9445.
BONNER SPRINGS, Kan. (AP) — A fleeing driver has been charged with causing a crash in the Kansas that killed a suburban Chicago teen.
29-year-old Anthony Dorsey was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder and fleeing or attempting to elude law enforcement.
The pursuit started Monday after a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper attempted to stop a car with a registration issue near a Kansas City, Kansas, shopping area. The patrol says the man fled westbound on Interstate 70 before turning around near Bonner Springs, Kansas, and driving into oncoming traffic.
That’s when 19-year-old Nathan Pena, of Brookfield, Illinois, was killed in a head-on crash while headed to Colorado to see friends. Dorsey, who was wanted on an armed robbery charge, had minor injuries and was taken into custody at the scene.
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Monday crash scene photo courtesy KCTV
LEAVENWORTH COUNTY —One person died in an accident during a chase by law enforcement just after 2p.m. Monday in Leavenworth County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Chevy Tahoe driven by Anthony Dorsey, 29, Kansas City, was westbound on Interstate 70 attempted to flee law enforcement.
The driver made a U-turn prior to the eastern entrance toll plaza. While traveling eastbound in the westbound lanes, a 2017 Subaru driven by Nathan Pena, 19, Brookfield, IL., made an evasive maneuver to avoid the Tahoe. The Tahoe collided with the Subaru in the north ditch.
Pena was pronounced dead at the scene. Dorsey was not injured. Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
Authorities have not released details on what prompted the chase and possible charges against Dorsey.