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Authorities investigating a series of alleged Kansas arson fires

COWLEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a series of fires that have occurred within the city of Winfield during the month of October, according to a media release from the Winfield Police and Fire Departments.

The fires October 6, at 11:46 p.m. in the 300 Block of West 16th Avenue, October 7, at 1:27 a.m., in the 600 Block of E 7th Avenue, October 13, at 4:42 a.m. in 400 Block of E 4th Avenue were in grass areas near the back of homes or outbuildings, according to the release.

The fire October 27 at 1:08 a.m. in the 800 Block of E 11th Avenue involved a vehicle on fire parked in front of a residence.

Fire officials collected evidence at the scene of each fire and forwarded it to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation lab for analysis. Fire officials believe these incidents are possibly connected.

There have been no injuries reported. The public is encouraged to contact the Police or Fire Department with any information they may have regarding these incidents

UPDATE: Blowing snow across western Kan., record cold possible across region

Updated 9 a.m. Wednesday

While Hays residents didn’t wake up to the predicted 4 to 5 inches of overnight snowfall, the National Weather Service in Dodge City is expecting snow flurries to continue into the afternoon.

Western Kansas remains under a winter weather advisory through 7 p.m. Wednesday.

Strong winds with gusts of up to 45 mph are decreasing visibility in areas, and some roadways are being reported as snow covered.

The NWS in Dodge City also is warning of record or near-record low temperatures Wednesday night, with the low in Hays predicted to fall to 12 degrees.

Farther west, the Goodland NWS also is calling for record low temperatures in its coverage area, with wind chill factors falling as low as 20 below. Westbound Interstate 70 was closed for a time overnight due to poor road conditions and accidents across the Colorado border.

Kansas man charged with violent attack on woman in driveway

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Charging documents say a man charged with stabbing a Wichita woman in her driveway confessed to the random attack in jail calls after his arrest.

Dunn photo Sedgwick Co.

The affidavit in the case against 30-year-old Wade Aaron Dunn was released Monday. Wade is charged with attempted first-degree murder and criminal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon in last month’s stabbing.

The affidavit says that while discussing whether his mug shot had been released, Wade said, “They should have a picture out saying, ‘Hey, this is the guy who (expletive) did it.”

The victim told police that her assailant didn’t say anything to her before attacking her as she loaded laundry into her vehicle. She says she begged him to stop, telling him, “I am a mother.”

FHSU men’s basketball receives votes in NABC Preseason Poll

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer photo

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Fort Hays State Men’s Basketball received votes in the NABC Division II Preseason Top 25 Poll, released on October 29, 2019. The Tigers are coming off an 18-11 season and were picked fourth in the MIAA Preseason Coaches and Media Polls.

The top four picks in both the MIAA Preseason Coaches and Media Polls are referenced in the preseason national poll, two inside the top 25 and two receiving votes. Defending national champion Northwest Missouri State will start the season No. 1 after a perfect 38-0 season in 2018-19, while Missouri Southern enters the season No. 10 in the nation. Washburn and Fort Hays State are also among the top 50 nationally in voting points. The Ichabods received 25 points and the Tigers received six.

This is the first appearance for FHSU in the receiving votes section of the NABC Poll since January of the 2015-16 season.

Fort Hays State opens the 2019-20 season on November 8 in Russellville, Arkansas. The Tigers will be taking on a pair of Great American Conference teams over that weekend, facing host Arkansas Tech on opening night before taking on Southwestern Oklahoma State on November 9.

Below is the NABC Preseason Top 25 Poll.

Rank Team 2018-19 Record Points Prev.
1 Northwest Missouri State (16) 38-0 400 1
2 Nova Southeastern (Fla.) 29-4 375 5
3 Bellarmine (Ky.) 28-5 353 7
4 West Liberty (W.Va.) 28-5 305 9
5 UC-San Diego 26-8 294 NR
6 Lincoln Memorial (Tenn.) 20-9 278 NR
7 West Texas A&M 34-4 266 3
8 Queens (N.C.) 31-5 247 10
9 Southern Nazarene (Okla.) 29-6 239 13
10 Missouri Southern 25-8 220 NR
11 Indiana (Pa.) 30-3 213 2
12 Valdosta State (Ga.) 24-7 203 21
13 Augusta (Ga.) 28-6 162 16
14 Colorado School of Mines 25-6 144 14
15 Northern State (S.D.) 26-7 135 19
16 Alabama-Huntsville 24-8 127 NR
17 Findlay (Ohio) 28-5 120 8
18 Southern Indiana 26-9 109 NR
19 Ashland (Ohio) 23-7 102 NR
20 St. Edward’s (Texas) 30-4 83 4
21 Saint Anselm (N.H.) 26-6 68 20
22 Daemen (N.Y.) 24-6 63 22
23 Concordia (Calif.) 23-11 60 NR
24 Tarleton State (Texas) 21-10 46 NR
25 Morehouse (Ga.) 20-5 39 NR

Others Receiving Votes: Azusa Pacific (Calif.) 38, Cal Poly Pomona 38, Jefferson (Pa.) 38, Augustana (S.D.) 36, Seattle Pacific (Wash.) 36, USC Aiken 31, Florida Southern 30, Bowie State (Md.) 28, Christian Brothers (Tenn.) 26, Bentley (Mass.) 25, Washburn (Kan.) 25, Davenport (Mich.) 22, Barry (Fla.) 19, St. Thomas Aquinas (N.Y.) 18, New Haven (Conn.) 17, Catawba (N.C.) 15, Southeastern Oklahoma State 14, Minnesota State 13, UNC Pembroke 13, Lewis (Ill.) 12, Point Loma (Calif.) 9, Western Oregon 8, Cal State East Bay 6, Fort Hays State (Kan.) 6, Chaminade (Hawai’i) 5, Emmanuel (Ga.) 5, East Stroudsburg (Pa.) 4, Bridgeport (Conn.) 3, Lynn (Fla.) 2, Western Washington 2, Belmont Abbey (N.C.) 1, Dixie State (Utah) 1, Indianapolis (Ind.) 1, Saint Martin’s (Wash.) 1, Slippery Rock (Pa.) 1.

Police find cocaine, THC loaded vape pens at Kansas home

SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas man on drug charges after a reported weekend altercation at a home.

Adam-Ramos photo Sedgwick County

Just after 5:30a.m. Sunday, police responded to a disturbance with a weapons call at a residence in the 500 Block of North Young in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.

Police were told of a physical disturbance in the home and possibly someone firing a gun.  When officers arrived, nobody would come to the door of the home. Officers did make entry into the home and contacted 28 -year-old Raul Adam-Ramos of Wichita.

They also found cocaine, marijuana, THC loaded vape pens, drug paraphernalia and a loaded gun.  Police collected the evidence and arrested Adam-Ramos on requested charges of possession of cocaine and marijuana with intent to sell and possession of drug paraphernalia, according to Davidson.

No officers were injured during the arrest, police found no others at the residence and did not determine if  there was a gun used, according to Davidson.

Ellis County business owners return from ‘Destination Bootcamp’

Session offers tools to change business, attract new customers

Grow Hays

Seven local business owners returned from a Colorado-based business improvement “Destination Business BootCamp”, where they learned hundreds of new methods to bring more customers and tourists to Hays and Ellis County.

This is the first group from Ellis County Kansas to ever attend the 20 hour Destination Bootcamp. Those attending were Sarah Cearley (Simply Charmed & Bella Luna), Karen Dreiling (The Furniture Look), Kathy Schupman (Kat’s Hallmark Shop), Oscar Runyon (Hickok’s Steakhouse), Kelly Koenke and Chandler Schumacher (Horizon Appliance and Mattress) and coordinator Ernee Sly (Grow Hays/ BriefSpace).

The two and one-half day “Destination BootCamp”, created by marketing consultant Jon Schallert, teaches independent business owners on how to reposition their businesses as “consumer destinations”. According to Schallert, a business using his “Destination Business” strategies can compete effectively with larger brick and mortar competitors, along with on line giants like Amazon. According to Schallert, it is not uncommon for destination businesses to create change in an entire city, by drawing consumers from miles around, from outside the immediate marketplace of a community.

“With the principles we learned at the BootCamp, we will be able to satisfy more of our customers’ needs and make buying local more enjoyable, fun experience. Additionally, we will be attracting more visitors and tourists from outside Ellis County,” Sly said. “With implementing what we’ve learned, there’s no reason we can’t draw shoppers from hundreds of miles away.”

Grow Hays is Ellis County’s local economic development agency and your partner in business success. Through Grow Hays, Ellis County is also a Network Kansas E-Community. They have made a commitment to cultivating an entrepreneurial environment by identifying and developing resources to help local entrepreneurs start or grow businesses. Network Kansas has designated Jon Schallert’s Destination BootCamp as a board-certified program.

Schallert’s Destination Business BootCamp is held in Colorado seven times annually. Schallert has worked with independent business owners since 1983, speaks to thousands every year, and is the President of The Schallert Group, Inc., Longmont, Colo. One newspaper called Schallert “the marketing guru rooting for the retail underdogs.” Business owners interested in attending can contact Sly at [email protected] or visit www.DestinationBootCamp.com.

Abortion clinic battle: Agency tracked Planned Parenthood patients’ periods

Department of Health and Senior Services Director Randall Williams made the revelation during the second day of an administrative hearing to determine whether Missouri’s only abortion clinic will lose its license to perform the procedure.

Williams said an investigator made a spreadsheet at his request that included the dates of patients’ last periods, The Kansas City Star reported. He said the goal was to find women who needed multiple procedures to complete an abortion.

The head of the St. Louis clinic called the move “deeply disturbing.”

“Missouri’s top health official, Randall Williams, scrutinized menstrual cycles of women in this state in order to end abortion access,” Yamelsie Rodriguez, president and CEO of Reproductive Health Services of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region, said in a statement.

Missouri House Minority Leader Crystal Quade, a Democrat from Springfield, called for an investigation to see if patient privacy was compromised or if laws were broken. She also was critical of Williams’ actions.

“State law requires the health department director to be ‘of recognized character and integrity,'” Quade said in a statement. “This unsettling behavior calls into question whether Dr. Williams meets that high standard.”

The state had moved to revoke the clinic’s license in June, citing concerns about a series of “failed abortions,” and a lack of cooperation from some of the doctors involved.

While Williams said concerns about the clinic are “grave,” he said the issues are “imminently fixable.” He believes there are solutions that both the state and Planned Parenthood would agree to that would allow for licensure.

Planned Parenthood says there are no deals on the table.

Wrangling over the license began when an investigator involved in a March inspection of the clinic found that a woman had undergone an abortion that took five attempts to complete. William Koebel, director of the section of the health department responsible for abortion clinic licensing, said Monday that the clinic failed to provide a “complication report” for that incident.

That failure led the health department to launch an investigation of other instances where women were required to undergo multiple procedures before an abortion was completed, Koebel said.

As part of that investigation, the state obtained medical records of women who had abortions at the clinic. They found four women who required multiple procedures, including one where the physician apparently missed that a woman was pregnant with twins. The woman underwent two procedures five weeks apart.

Planned Parenthood officials contend the state “cherry-picked” a handful of difficult cases out of thousands of otherwise successful abortions. They have accused the state of using the licensing process as a tool to eliminate abortions in Missouri, saying the state is among several conservative-led states seeking to end abortion through tough new laws and tighter restrictions.

The Administrative Hearing Commission isn’t expected to rule on the licensing issue until February at the earliest. In the meantime, the clinic remains open.

Missouri would become the first state since 1974, the year after the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision, without a functioning abortion clinic if the license is revoked.

Missouri is among several states to pass new restrictions on abortions in the hope that the increasingly conservative U.S. Supreme Court will eventually overturn Roe v. Wade. Gov. Mike Parson, a Republican, signed legislation in May banning abortions at or beyond eight weeks of pregnancy, with exceptions for medical emergencies but not for rape or incest. The law is on hold while a legal challenge plays out in court.

While the Missouri case unfolded, Planned Parenthood quietly built a new abortion clinic in Illinois, just across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, in part to meet demand from Missouri residents. The clinic in Fairview Heights opened Wednesday.

Missouri women have been increasingly getting abortions at the Hope Clinic for Women in Granite City, Illinois, another St. Louis suburb. Deputy Director Alison Dreith said 58% of the abortions performed at the Hope Clinic through August of this year involved Missouri women, compared with 37% involving Illinois women.

Another abortion clinic sits in Overland Park, Kansas, a Kansas City suburb. The clinic is 2 miles (3 kilometers) from the state line. Information from the state of Kansas shows about 3,300 of the 7,000 abortions performed there last year involved Missouri residents.

🎥 City Commission Candidate: Mason Ruder

Mason Ruder

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

As the Ellis County Environmental Supervisor, Mason Ruder, 28, works closely with the city of Hays.

As a candidate for the Hays city commission, Ruder believes that experience gives him an edge.

“Regulations is what I do,” he laughs.

“Doing planning and zoning for the county and knowing state and federal regulations for things, the city shouldn’t be much different.

“We try to work together as best as possible. … seeing what we can do to make the county and the city run more efficiently with as few tax dollars as needed.

Ruder and his wife Tori, who operates an in-home daycare, have a nine-month old daughter, Ryleigh. Ruder is a Hays native and graduate of TMP-Marian High School.

He appreciates that the city is in “fantastic” financial shape and “doing a very good job using our money wisely.”

That puts Hays in a good position, Ruder says, to look for ways to foster growth.

He’s particularly concerned about the need for affordable housing, which could help keep Fort Hays State University graduates from leaving Hays. “We have resources here in the community, Grow Hays and realtors, to do it.”

“As a young professional myself, it was kind of difficult to find a good home to start my life with.”

Ruder feels he would bring a fresh perspective to the commission.

“I’m not running with any ulterior motive. I’m doing it because I love this community.

“I know with a little one at home, I could spend a lot more time with her. But I’m doing this for her, and for everybody else.”

The top two city commission candidates will serve for four years, while the third-place vote-getter will serve for two years.

Advanced voting is underway. The election is Nov. 5.

Kansas Farm Bureau Insight: Health food? Mine’s meat

Greg Doering

By GREG DOERING
Kansas Farm Bureau

Kansas Farm Bureau’s (KFB) brand, Kansas Living, recently launched a campaign promoting the benefits of eating meat I never would have imagined necessary when I was growing up. While it wasn’t always the main attraction, meat was always on our plates for dinner. Oftentimes it was there at lunchtime, too.

Kansas Living’s “Make Mine Meat” campaign encourages the inclusion of all types of animal protein in one’s diet for its high-quality nutritional value.

Personally, I encourage everyone to eat meat because it’s delicious anytime. That’s not a slight to all the tasty, nutritious nonmeat foods out there, either. I’m an indiscriminate omnivore when I sit down at the table. Not every meal features meat, but the ones that do are generally my favorites. Those meals also help fuel my body.

“Animal protein plays an essential role in your diet,” says Eryn Carter, a registered dietitian. “Animal meat products contain all nine essential amino acids that your body cannot produce but needs in order to function.”

The “Make Mine Meat” campaign features athletes who consume meat because its nutritional value supports their active lifestyles. Unfortunately, yours truly wasn’t asked to be a model for this campaign despite my body’s ability to hide most of its athletic features. But that’s more a result of missed gym sessions and my penchant for snacking.

Meat is always on the table for DJ Rezac, who enjoys cooking almost as much as he likes eating. A cyclist, Rezac says he eats meat to power his pedals.

“Meat is muscle,” Rezac says. “If you need muscle, you need to eat meat. That’s maybe an oversimplification, but to me and my diet, red meat is the best source for zinc, iron and protein.”

Rezac’s diet isn’t breaking new ground. Fossil evidence shows humans have been eating meat and bone marrow for millions of years. Evidence of our ancestors’ carnivorous ways has been documented by butchery marks on bones dating back at least 2.6 million years, well before the birth of agriculture in 8000 B.C.

Today, in addition to boosting the performance of countless athletes, meat adds some serious kick to Kansas’ economy. The state is a top producer of meat, specifically pork and beef. Kansas ranks third nationally with 6.35 million cattle and 10th in hog and pig inventory. And it also could put an extra $100 in your grocery cart.

Participants who post a photo of their favorite meat product, recipe or reason they choose to include meat in their diets using the hashtag #MakeMineMeat on Facebook and/or Instagram will be eligible to win one of three $100 gift cards to a local grocery store so winners can purchase great-tasting, high-quality, nutritious meat. Private profiles may send a direct message of their post to Kansas Living’s Facebook or Instagram accounts.

What’s for dinner? On my plate, it’s meat.

“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.

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