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Police ask for help to locate Kan. felon who escaped from custody

RILEY COUNTY —Police in Manhattan need help finding 33-year-old Cory Calkins, who escaped from custody Saturday morning.

Calkins photo KDOC

Police arrested him on probable cause offenses of aggravated burglary, possession of meth, possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, according to a media release.

Calkins has previous convictions for theft, burglary, “unlawful vol sex relations intercourse,” obstruction and for drugs, according to the Kansas Department of corrections

Police reminded “If you see Calkins do not approach him and call 911.

Tigers seek seventh straight win against Lincoln in Jefferson City

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer photo

RV/#25 Fort Hays State (6-2, 6-2 MIAA) at
Lincoln (1-7, 1-7 MIAA)
Saturday, November 2, 2019 – 1 pm
Dwight T. Reed Stadium – Jefferson City, Mo.
LISTEN LIVE

Fort Hays State Football hits the road this weekend for a road contest at Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri. FHSU enters the game 6-2, while Lincoln is 1-7. The Tigers are looking for their seventh straight win after an 0-2 start to the year, and their seventh straight win in the series history with the Blue Tigers.

The Tigers look to stay alive in the conference championship race and NCAA Playoff picture. FHSU is two games back of MIAA-leading Central Missouri and just one back of second-place Northwest Missouri State. If the Tigers are going to make the NCAA Playoffs for a third straight year, winning their final three regular season games is most likely the only option. FHSU enters this week ranked No. 9 in the Super Region 3 rankings. The top seven in the super region will make the NCAA Playoffs and the Tigers have seven teams with one loss or less in front of them, as well as a two-loss Missouri Western team that they lost to early in the season.

Fort Hays State and Lincoln are meeting for the first time since the 2013 season, the last year Lincoln was a member of the MIAA before coming back into the conference this season with the departure of Lindenwood. The Blue Tigers played as members of the GLVC from 2014-2018 while absent from the MIAA in football. FHSU won that 2013 meeting 45-35. FHSU has traditionally seen close battles with Lincoln. The previous three meetings between FHSU and Lincoln in MIAA play were decided by 10 points or less, all going to FHSU in the win column.

Offensively, the Tigers have scored at least 30 points in six of eight games this season. FHSU is coming off a 37-31 win over Nebraska-Kearney at home last week. The Tigers are averaging 37 points in four road games so far this year, scoring at least 30 in all four.

Lincoln began the season 0-6 before claiming its first win of the year over a winless Northeastern State squad in Week 7 by a score of 27-9. The Blue Tigers have allowed at least 38 points in all seven of their losses this year. Lincoln is coming off a 56-9 loss at Northwest Missouri State last week. Running back Hosea Franklin accounts for over 50 percent of Lincoln’s total offense. He is the only player in the MIAA with over 1,000 rushing yards this season with 1,048 through eight games. He averages 131 yards per game on the ground.

Chance Fuller is the triggerman for the Tiger offense. FHSU ranks 10th in the nation in passing offense, averaging 314.3 yards per game through the air. Individually Fuller averages 306.5 passing yards per game, which ranks ninth in NCAA Division II. He has 2,452 passing yards with 25 touchdowns so far this year. Harley Hazlett, Manny Ramsey, and Layne Bieberle have been a triple threat of targets for Fuller. Hazlett leads the team in receiving yards with 673, followed by Ramsey with 596 and Bieberle with 589. Charles Tigner leads the Tiger ground game with 643 rushing yards, going over 100 yards in a game three times this season.

Defensively, Drew Harvey leads the Tigers in tackles with 69, followed by Tanner Hoekman with 67 and Jordan Starks with 64. The aforementioned trio has six of the team’s 10 interceptions this season. Sheldon Schmidt continues to lead the team in sacks with three.

Defunct Plainville Livestock Commission’s debts yet to be settled

The former Plainville Livestock Commission buildings and property sold in June, but the defunct livestock seller’s debuts have yet to be settled.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post 

Ranchers waiting to receive funds from the now-closed Plainville Livestock Commission are still waiting for resolution.

Much of the commission’s property, including the real property in Plainville, was liquidated during an auction in late June. The commission’s bankruptcy case is still open, although it has been changed from a Chapter 11, which is a reorganization, to a Chapter 7, liquidation.

However, the adversary case filed by Almena Bank is still winding its way through the court system.

Plainville Livestock Commission declared bankruptcy on March 1. Tyler Gillum, 47, and his wife, Camden Gillum, 50, owners of the Plainville Livestock Commission, were federally indicted for an alleged check-kiting scheme May 29. 

Dozens of cattle producers were caught up in the Gillums’ alleged scheme after money that was supposed to be set aside to pay cattle sellers was transferred from a custodial account to the Plainville Livestock Auction’s operating account. The Almena Bank froze both accounts, which resulted in bounced checks amounting to tens of thousands of dollars per producer.

The adversary case in federal court is seeking to determine how the $900,000 being held in trust by the court should be divided among  livestock producers and creditors.

According to court documents dated Oct. 24, counsel are working on a settlement in the case. The records also said one of the claims might need to go to trial. The next status conference in the case is set for 10:30 a.m. Dec. 12.

RELATED: Plainville Livestock Commission property sells at auction

RELATED: Ranchers express frustration as Plainville Livestock funds remain in court’s hands

RELATED: Producers try to recoup losses after Plainville Livestock Commission drains account

RELATED: Plainville economy trying to recover after two bankruptcies in a month

Shoebox packing parties in full swing for Operation Christmas Child

Brenda Evans, a volunteer with Operation Christmas Child, helps Kathleen Staab of Hays pack a shoebox at the Buckeye Family and Consumer Education group’s Oct. 17 meeting. In the background are Ellen Schmidt of Hays and her 4-month-old granddaughter, Cora. (Courtesy photo)
Judy Cohen of Hays, a member of the Buckeye Family and Consumer Education group, looks over items to select from while packing two shoeboxes. (Courtesy photo)

By LINN ANN HUNTINGTON

It’s that time of year. The holidays are quickly approaching, and that means Operation Christmas Child shoebox packing parties are in full swing.

Operation Christmas Child is a ministry of Samaritan’s Purse, a disaster relief organization headquartered in Boone, N.C. Each year thousands of individuals pack shoeboxes with toys, school supplies and personal hygiene items to distribute to needy children around the world.

Messiah Lutheran Church, 2000 Main, will be hosting a shoebox packing party beginning at 9:45 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 3, and the community is invited to participate.

One group that has already had a packing party is the Buckeye Family and Consumer Education group, which held its event Oct. 17 at Ellis Estates in Hays.

Some of the club members brought their own items; others used donated items provided by OCC. Club members were responsible for providing the $9 shipping fee required for each box. Some of the members chose to pack one box; others decided to pack two.

Linda Collins and Brenda Evans, two OCC volunteers, were on hand to pass out empty OCC shoeboxes and to assist the group members in selecting items for either a boy or a girl in one of three age groups.

Ellen Schmidt of Hays said she had packed boxes before with another civic organization.

“I have a lot of grandkids,” Schmidt said, “and I know how much they enjoy these things.”

Kathleen Staab of Hays was a first-time packer.

Referring to her four grandchildren, Staab said she wanted to participate in the event because “if you can make kids feel good, that’s a good thing.”

Bonnie Flora, a retired teacher, recently moved to Hays from California. She said she wanted to get involved in packing a box because she remembered a time when a child came to school without any panties on. The girl’s family simply couldn’t afford them. Flora made sure she packed clothing items in her box.

Those wishing to pack their own shoeboxes may find a list of suggested items at www.samaritanspurse.org/occ.

All told, the Buckeye members packed 14 shoeboxes in about an hour.

In 2018, more than 10.6 million shoeboxes were collected worldwide, with more than 6,800 of those collected in northwest Kansas. Rachel Albin, Northwest Kansas coordinator for OCC, said this year’s goal for her area is 7,363 boxes, an increase of 9 percent from 2018.

But Albin said she is confident the goal will be met, especially as more churches and civic groups schedule more packing parties between now and Shoebox Collection Week.

That week will be Nov. 18 through 25. Ellis County has two shoebox drop-off sites, Messiah Lutheran and CrossPoint Church, 13th and Harvest Road. All shoeboxes collected in Ellis County will then be taken to Denver for processing, then shipped to various countries.

Those wishing to schedule a shoebox packing party or wanting more information about OCC can contact Albin at (785) 639-1325 or [email protected].

Linda Collins, administrative assistant for Operation Christmas Child of Northwest Kansas, helps Bonnie Flora of Hays squeeze one more item, a pair of flip-flops, into Flora’s shoebox. (Courtesy photo)

Kansas is ‘home’ for fans celebrating 80th anniversary of ‘Oz’

Carla Eckels / KMUW

By CARLA ECKELS
KMUW-Wichita

WAMEGO — The Wizard of Oz, considered one of the most viewed films of all time, turns 80 this year.

For the last 16 years, a tiny town in northeast Kansas has embraced the appeal of the MGM classic.

The Oz Museum, located downtown Wamego, draws 35,000 fans annually from all 50 states and 45 countries. It’s filled with all things Oz.

Carla Eckels / KMUW

Even a member of the Lollipop Guild was at one point a frequent visitor to the museum. Oz Museum curator Chris Glasgow says munchkin actor Jerry Maren left his mark on the venue.

“We have his handprints, footprints, and his signature in our Walk of Fame in front of the theatre,” Glasgow says. “Unfortunately, he passed away about two years ago, at the age of 98.”

Created in 2003, the museum contains the largest permanent public display of Oz artifacts in the world.

The Oz Museum has close to 18,000 pieces in its archives, which allows the musuem to change things out. Nearly 2,000 items are on display at any given time.

Earlier this year, Oz fans gathered inside the museum for the unveiling of a newly acquired artifact: an original winkie spear from the 1939 movie.

Oz Museum executive director Clint Stueve says the spear has been in circulation for 80 years.

Carla Eckels / KMUW

“It’s found a new home at the Oz Museum and we hope to take very good care of it and it brings joy to Oz fans for many years to come,” he says. “We are just very grateful that we have it here now.”

The winkie spear is among the original artifacts on display. Glasgow says set props weren’t always kept back when the film was made.

“They would use them over and over again until they fell apart,” he says. “Miss Gulch’s bike was used in movies until it was nothing but trash. Glenda the Good Witch’s dress was used in so many other movies which is why it’s hard to come by original artifacts from the film.

“So when we can find them we do everything we can to bring them into the museum permanently.”

The Oz Museum also includes other original artifacts such as eyeglasses worn by Miss Gulch, a one-of-a-kind jeweled brooch worn by Glinda the Good Witch, and two munchkin costumes worn by the Davis brothers in the iconic film.

Carla Eckels / KMUW

Although artifacts from the film are hard to come by, Oz historian John Fricke says the lasting impact of the film itself was felt long before the age of home video and streaming.

“As early as 1970, they were saying The Wizard of Oz had been seen by more people than any other entertainment in history,” Fricke says. “Just last year, it was voted by a panel of experts as the most influential movie of all time, that there are more references to The Wizard of Oz in other films than in any other picture.”

Lynda Yelnick fondly remembers going to see the movie when she was 5 years old, then years later, taking her own 5-year-old son. She said they both buried their faces during what she remembered as the scary witch scenes.

This year, Yelnick and her son finally made it to the Oz Museum. She wanted to be sure to come and celebrate the 80th anniversary of The Wizard of Oz.

Carla Eckels / KMUW

“I waited,” Yelnick says. “I wanted to come for the 80th. I always wanted to come here, and this to me is like, there’s no place like home, there’s no place like Oz, Wamego, and I’m thrilled.

“As old as I am, you never outgrow The Wizard of Oz.

Carla Eckels is director of cultural diversity and the host of Soulsations. Follow her on Twitter @Eckels. To contact KMUW News or to send in a news tip, reach us at [email protected].

INSIGHT KANSAS: Anti-abortion activists threaten judicial independence

H. Edward Flentje is professor emeritus at Wichita State University.

Two justices of the Kansas Supreme Court recently announced their retirements, and well-established constitutional procedures are now underway to fill those vacancies.

In a desperate, preemptive strike anti-abortion activists interjected themselves into the selection process and declared two candidates under consideration ideologically unfit to fill a position on the Kansas Supreme Court.

Kansans should be assured, however, that this political dustup will not derail the constitutionally mandated process. For now, three candidates, including one of the targeted candidates, Chief Judge Evelyn Wilson of the Shawnee County District Court, have been properly screened, found to be qualified, and forwarded to Gov. Laura Kelly who must select one for final appointment to the Court.

The unusual, last-minute gambit comes as little surprise as abortion opponents have in recent years had their way with state lawmakers, specifically former Gov. Sam Brownback and Republican legislative majorities, in enacting numerous measures that restrict access to abortion.

However, these activists have tried but failed to bend the Kansas Supreme Court to their will. They have been blocked by the Kansas Constitution, which establishes an independent judiciary and prescribes that “qualifications” not politics should determine who sits on the state’s highest court.

Over 60 years ago Kansas voters overwhelmingly adopted a constitutional amendment designed to reinforce judicial independence and remove partisan political considerations from the selection of justices to the Kansas Supreme Court. That constitutional language provides for a “non-partisan” Supreme Court Nominating Commission to screen candidates and nominate “three persons possessing the qualifications of office” to the governor for consideration and appointment of one of those to the Court. Once appointed, each Supreme Court justice periodically stands before voters in a statewide retention election to determine whether the justice should be retained on the Court.

This constitutional procedure, often termed “merit selection,” has repeatedly been embraced by Kansas voters. Each of the 25 justices appointed based on qualifications has stood for retention on one or more occasions and been retained by voters. Each of the nine Kansas governors elected in this period—five Republicans and four Democrats—has appointed at least one justice to the Court.

These constitutional safeguards stand in the way of anti-abortion activists and their desire to realign the Kansas judiciary more to their political liking. Kansans for Life and its allies have sought to undo these provisions and have mounted repeated attacks on the Court. They have advocated abandoning merit selection of justices, conducted postcard campaigns to oust justices in retention elections, cheered lawmakers threatening the Court with budget cuts and impeachment, and now have tried to blackball prospective Court candidates. These actions have garnered headlines but to date have not altered the Court’s independence.

Earlier this year the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that the Bill of Rights in the state constitution guarantees each Kansan “personal autonomy” which includes “the ability to control one’s own body” and allows a woman to determine “whether to continue a pregnancy.” The Court’s decision potentially jeopardizes recently enacted abortion restrictions and gives new urgency to anti-abortion interests that seek to control the Court.

Kansans should rest assured that for now the selection of new justices for the Supreme Court will proceed steadily on the basis of merit. They should remain vigilant, however, as special interests such as abortion opponents make another push to politicize the Court and threaten the independence of the state’s judicial branch.

H. Edward Flentje is emeritus professor at Wichita State University and served with former Kansas Governors Bennett and Hayden.

CROSS: Let’s focus energy policy on lifting people up

Edward Cross is president of the Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association

By EDWARD CROSS
Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association

Energy is so thoroughly woven into our daily lives that few ever question whether it will be there, or where it comes from. Oil-based products are likely the first thing you touch at the beginning and end of each day, whether it is your alarm clock, cellphone, or even the toothpaste and toothbrush you use to brush your teeth. As a key component in heart valves, seat belts, helmets, life vests, and even Kevlar, petroleum is saving tens of thousands of lives daily. Furthermore, oil and gas are key components in many medicines and antibiotics such as antiseptics, antihistamines, aspirin, and sulfa drugs.

The oil and gas industry has done such a good job of creating abundant, affordable, always-available energy that the world takes it for granted. Because energy is so reliable and available, some think we no longer require it. We encounter this paradox anytime we hear from those who want to end oil and gas production but still want to benefit from oil and gas based materials and fuels.

What Americans expect and deserve are the facts. And the fact is, recent history has disproved the false premise that economic growth and significant increases in energy production must, necessarily, come at the expense of environmental improvement.

Today, the U.S. is not only the world leader in energy production, but we have some of the cleanest air in the world. From 1970-2017, the six major pollutants monitored by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have plunged 73%, while the U.S. economy grew by 60%. EPA Data also shows that from 2011 to 2017, methane emissions from oil and natural gas production in the U.S. decreased by 24%. The oil and natural gas industry has proven that over the long-term, we can lead the world in energy production and environmental stewardship.

What would it mean for consumers, the economy, and future job creation if we substantially limited exploration, development, and use of fossil fuels in America’s energy supply mix? A recent study by the Energy Information Administration indicates the average American family would see their energy costs increase by $4,550 per year. It could mean a cumulative loss of $11.8 trillion in the nation’s GDP and the loss of 6 million jobs. Recent studies indicate that if the U.S. eliminated all CO2 emissions immediately, it would avert 0.07 degrees of warming by 2050. If Kansas alone eliminated all CO2 emissions, it would avert 0.001 degrees of warming by 2050. How many lost jobs is that worth?

The U.S. has a unique opportunity to show the world how energy abundance can be used as a positive force to lift people up, which is different than a zero-emissions world. We should work to ensure more people have access to safe, affordable, and reliable energy. Because to rise out of poverty and enjoy health and safety, people need more energy, not less.

We should set aside the acrimony and division that has marked too much of past energy policy discussions and work together as one nation on a positive forward-looking energy future based on the understanding that our nation’s best energy future can only be achieved through a true all-of-the-above energy strategy.

Edward Cross is president of the Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Association.

FIRST FIVE: Strange case of DOL’s proposed rule on religious exemption

Foltin

By RICHARD T. FOLTIN
Freedom Forum Institute

A proposed rule issued by the Office of Federal Contractor Compliance Programs (OFCCP) of the U.S. Department of Labor, slated soon to be issued in its final form, has been billed by the administration as an enhancement of religious freedom. But, in fact, the rule would diminish protections of employees’ religious freedom and civil rights.

On Sept. 24, 1965, building on actions taken by previous chief executives, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed Executive Order (EO) 11246, which established requirements for non-discriminatory practices in hiring and employment on the part of U.S. government contractors. As subsequently amended, the order prohibits discrimination by federal contractors based on race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or national origin. OFCCP is the agency responsible for assuring that federal contractors comply with these non-discrimination obligations.

In December 2002, President George W. Bush amended EO 11246 to allow an exemption for contracting religious organizations that permits them to discriminate “with respect to the employment of individuals of a particular religion to perform work connected with the carrying on by such corporation, association, educational institution or society of its activities.” This latter language closely tracks the religious exemption provision of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (the section of the Civil Rights Act dealing with employment discrimination). And, following the fashion in which Title VII has been applied, the exemption does not excuse contractors from complying with the other requirements of EO 11246, even on the basis of religious belief.

Adoption of the Bush amendment was not without controversy. Rather, it raised concerns over whether or not faith-based organizations that are awarded government contracts should be allowed to engage in religious discrimination, notwithstanding that these organizations would otherwise have the benefit of Title VII’s religious exemption. In contrast, proponents of the amendment maintained that the need to protect the autonomy of religious organizations with Title VII religious exemptions isn’t diminished simply because those organizations are government contractors.

At first glance, debate over the Bush amendment parallels debate over whether or not faith-based organizations that receive government grants to provide social services should have the benefit of religious exemptions from anti-employment discrimination provisions covering those grants. That parallel between federal contractors and grantees is complicated, however, by two key differences between government contracts and government grants, each of which alters the calculation in a different direction. On the one hand, the contractual relationship is more likely to be ongoing and intertwined with government in contrast to what may be a one-off grant, leading to the conclusion that it is more problematic to provide religious contractors with religious exemptions. On the other hand, the provisions of EO 11246 have more sweeping implications for religious contractors in that the executive order’s antidiscrimination provisions apply to the entire organization, not just, as is the case with many grants, the project for which funding is provided.

Whatever the merits of the underlying Bush amendment, the proposed rule constitutes a broad and ill-advised expansion — in the name of protecting religious freedom “to the maximum extent permitted” — of the fashion in which the Bush amendment has been applied[1]:

  • The proposed rule cannot actually change EO 11246; that would require another executive order. So in theory, workers remain entitled to the full protections EO 11246 provides (i.e., even an employer entitled to invoke the religious exemption cannot, by claiming a religious basis for doing so, engage in discrimination directed at members of another protected category). Nevertheless, through the manner in which it expands the scope and availability of the religious exemption, the proposed rule raises real questions regarding the extent to which employees of federal contractors will be adequately protected from religious discrimination, as well as from other forms of discrimination, most notably when discrimination is directed at LGBTQ people. The proposed rule is, in essence, an initiative about protecting the prerogatives of employers at the expense of employees;
  • The term “religious corporation, association, educational institution or society” is newly defined to encompass significantly more employers than under Title VII case law or the current EO 11246 — notwithstanding that OFCCP acknowledges that the religious exemption in EO 11246 should be understood to have the same meaning as in Title VII. Under the proposed rule, federal contractors would be able to invoke the exemption so long as they can pinpoint a religious purpose that is a public part of their mission and demonstrate that they engage in religious exercise to further that purpose. This interpretation, which allows for-profit corporations and nominally religious entities to claim the religious exemption, is without basis in Title VII case law, sends the wrong message to employers and may put employers at risk of civil rights lawsuits under federal and state law, even as they retain their status as federal contractors;
  • Even as the proposed rule purports to interpret EO 11246’s limitation of the religious exemption to allow a newly broadened category of organizations to prefer members of a particular faith, it adopts a more lenient standard for evaluating whether or not a claim of employment discrimination is based on religion or on another protected category. This makes it more difficult for employees to challenge discrimination on the grounds that religion has been used as a pretext for discrimination on other bases. Further, by incorporating a test that is more lenient for employers, the proposed rule signals to employers that so long as they can articulate what looks like a legitimate non-discriminatory basis for an otherwise discriminatory decision, they will be able to retain their federal contracts — a situation with particularly dire implications for LGBTQ people;
  • The proposed rule misappropriates the Title VII definition of “religion,” intended to protect workers against religious discrimination, enabling companies to discriminate against employees. Title VII defines religion broadly to protect both the beliefs and practices of employees and to require employers to provide religious accommodations. Unfortunately, and perversely, the proposed rule would use this definition of religion to protect employers, not their workers, by granting a wide range of employers who contract with the federal government broad authority to engage in discriminatory practices on the basis of religion against their employees. In one notable case, an employer was found to have violated Title VII when it required its employees to attend prayer services over their objections. Because it would allow for-profit or nominally religious employers to make employment decisions on the basis of religion, the proposed rule could open the door for employers to require employees to participate in such prayer services or Bible studies, i.e., the religious practice of the employer. At the least, the proposed rule would set up a conflict as to the applicable law on this issue;
  • The proposed rule relies on an exaggerated claim that OFCCP cannot even inquire about whether or not an employer’s assertion that it has made an employment decision on the basis of religion was instead an act of discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin or sex, including sexual orientation or gender identity. While the government must avoid taking sides on questions of religious doctrine, it is not prohibited from deciding what is and is not “religion” for purposes of deciding when religious freedom protections come into play. The proposed rule’s approach undermines the very structure of the protections of religious freedom that are part of the Constitution and federal and state statutes.

In sum, OFCCP’s proposed rule’s harmful and unnecessary expansion of the existing religious exemption for employers endangers the religious freedom and civil rights of employees across the nation. Hopefully, OFCCP will take heed of the many comments urging that it reject the proposal.

[1] The following points draw on comments filed by the American Bar Association (ABA), opposing adoption of the proposed rule. The ABA was one of thousands of organizations and individuals to weigh in, pro and con. The author played a role in drafting the ABA’s comments.

Richard T. Foltin is a senior scholar of the Religious Freedom Center of the Freedom Forum Institute. Contact him via email at [email protected], or follow him on Twitter at @rfoltin.

BOOR: Testing for hay quality

Alicia Boor

How much did the spring and summer’s weather affect the feed value of your hay?  You don’t know?  Then forage test.

Nearly every bushel of corn has similar nutrient concentration, but with hay it varies considerably.  Why does this happen?  Well, there are many causes.  For example, leafiness of the hay, or maturity of the plant when your hay was cut, or even how you handled the hay during raking and baling all can affect its feed value.

This year, weather conditions have made things more complicated.  This spring’s floods and cool, wet weather caused many folks to delay first cutting or got rain-damaged hay.  Leaf diseases, mature plants, and other factors made much alfalfa lower in quality.  During summer, we had periods of hot and very humid weather that often caused plants to burn off their easily digested nutrients at night, leaving us with hay that looks really good but is high in fiber and low in energy.

Grass hay might be even more difficult to predict.  Some fields had fewer seedheads than normal.  This might give higher quality hay, but if harvest was delayed in hopes of increasing yield or if the heat affected grass quality like it affects alfalfa, grass hay quality might actually be lower.  And when growth is stimulated by extra rain, plants use many nutrients for increased tonnage instead of quality.

And I haven’t even mentioned all the different forages used on prevented planting acres.  Different species harvested late in the year; who knows what the protein and TDN levels are like.
So you see, this year, just like always, forage testing is important.  It is the only way that you can find out for sure ahead of time what the feed value is of your hay.

So gather samples now for testing, before feeding your animals and before it’s too late.

If you have any questions, or would like more information, you can contact me by calling 620-793-1910, by email at [email protected] or just drop by the office located at 1800 12th street in Great Bend.

Alicia Boor is one of the Agriculture and Natural Resources agents for the Cottonwood District, which includes Barton and Ellis counties.

Police: 2 in custody after alleged kidnapping in Junction City

 

Law enforcement on the scene of the arreFriday photo courtesy WIBW TV

GEARY COUNTY —A man and a woman were taken into custody following the alleged kidnapping of a one-year old infant boy in the 1000 block of West 6th Street in Junction City and a pursuit that ended west of Lawrence Friday, according to Junction City Police. The one-year old infant was rescued safely.

The incident began just before 2 p.m. Friday with the Kansas Highway Patrol joining Junction City police in tracking the Chevrolet Silverado pickup as it traveled down Interstate 70. It was located west of Topeka but was eventually stopped farther east.

No injuries were reported. Police did not release names of the suspects.

TMP ends season with rout of Ellinwood

ELLINWOOD – The TMP-Marian Monarchs closed out the 2019 season with a 54-0 win over Ellinwood Friday night in Ellinwood.

Coach Jay Harris

It took the Monarch offense a little bit to get going Friday night, turning it over on downs on their first possession, but on their second possession they needed just two plays to cover 46 yards and they took a 7-0 lead thanks to a two-yard Kade Harris touchdown run.

Harris scored three rushing touchdowns and scored seven in the final two games of the season.

Already leading 7-0 the Monarchs put together an eight-play, 60-yard drive that ended with a two-yard TD run for Colby Dreiling to give TMP the 14-0 lead. Dreiling finished with two scores in the ground in the game.

Harris added his second first-half rushing touchdown with just over a minute left in the second quarter as TMP took a 20-0 lead, after failing to convert a two-point try.

On Ellinwood’s next possession they ran just two plays for Harris intercepted Eagles quarterback Kyle Doll with 1:03 to play in the first half.

TMP wasted little time and got on the board four the fourth time in the first half when Harris found Jace Wentling for a 17-yard score that gave TMP a 26-0 lead at the break.

In the second half Harris found Dreiling for a one-yard touchdown, Dreiling and Harris both added fourth quarter rushing touchdowns and Andrew Schwartz capped off the game with his first career rushing touchdown as TMP rolled to the 54-0 win.

Harris was 11-for-16 passing for 163 yards and two touchdowns. He also rushed for 138 yards and three scores.

TMP finishes the second 3-6 for the third straight year. Ellinwood finishes the season 1-8.

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