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Man accused of driving drunk at 110 mph with kids in vehicle

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Court documents say a man who is charged with a felony was driving drunk with a 2-, 4- and 10-year-old in his vehicle as he sped down a Missouri highway at 110 mph.

Pike photo Buchanan County Jail

Thirty-three-year-old Justin Pike, of St. Joseph, was charged this week with child endangerment. He was stopped for speeding Sunday on Interstate 29 in Buchanan County. Court documents allege that Missouri State Highway Patrol troopers smelled alcohol on his breath and administered a sobriety test, which he failed.

He has been released on bond. No attorney is listed for him in online court records.

FHSU opens men’s basketball season with exhibition game at Kansas

Courtesy FHSU Athletics

Tiger fans can get a first look at the 2019-20 Fort Hays State Men’s Basketball squad on Thursday night when they travel to Lawrence for an exhibition game with the University of Kansas. Tipoff is set for 7 pm at Allen Fieldhouse. The game will be available to purchase for viewing on ESPN+ (WatchESPN) or Big 12 Now. It can be heard on KJLS (103.3-FM) and the Tiger Sports Network. LISTEN LIVE

The Tigers finished at 18-11 overall in 2018-19, while placing fourth in the MIAA regular season standings with a conference mark of 12-7. FHSU ended its season in the MIAA Tournament Quarterfinals in a loss to Lincoln University. The Tigers reached at least 18 wins in a season for the fourth straight year and produced Mark Johnson’s 17th winning season guiding the Tigers out of 18 seasons overall. Johnson will enter the 2019-20 campaign with an overall record of 359-172 (.676) at FHSU.

Fort Hays State will have several new faces on the court this season. The Tigers return six players from last year, but only four saw time on the floor in 2018-19. Aaron Nicholson, Devin Davis, Jared Vitztum, and Nyjee Wright are among those four, while Calvin Harrington and Gilbert Peters redshirted. Johnson has brought in eight new players this season, looking to mesh with the returning group. Five of the eight are transfers, while the other three are true freshmen.

Nicholson is the top returning scorer for the Tigers, averaging 9.0 points per game last year. Davis was the top scorer off the bench at 8.6 points per game. Both reached double figures in scoring in 12 contests last season. Vitztum, the top returning rebounder, averaged 7.3 points and 5.3 rebounds per game.

Fort Hays State and Kansas last met in exhibition on November 7, 2017. Kansas won 86-57, but not before a challenge from FHSU in the first half. The Tigers held a lead just past 16 minutes into the game, 29-28, before KU took a 38-33 lead into halftime. In fact, the Tigers took the lead five times in the opening half, each by one point. The Jayhawks went on to double up the Tigers in the second half, 48-24.

Following the exhibition game with Kansas on Thursday, FHSU will open its regular season November 8-9 in Russellville, Arkansas where it will face Arkansas Tech and Southwestern Oklahoma State.

AP: Rebuilding Padres hire former Lark as manager

Tingler / Texas Rangers

By BERNIE WILSON
AP Sports Writer

SAN DIEGO — A person familiar with the decision says the rebuilding San Diego Padres have hired Jayce Tingler from the Texas Rangers as their new manager.

The person spoke with The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the hiring hasn’t been announced.

Tingler has most recently been the major league player development field coordinator for the Rangers. His only previous managerial experience has been at the lowest rungs.

He replaces Andy Green, who was blamed for the Padres’ second-half collapse when he fired with eight games left in the season.

Tingler faces tremendous expectations from ownership and a long-suffering fan base. The Padres were last in the NL West at 70-92 even after signing Manny Machado to a $300 million contract and promoting top rookies Fernando Tatis Jr. and Chris Paddack.

The former Missouri Tiger was member of the Hays Larks NBC runner-up team in 2000 and ranks in top 10 in Larks history in runs scored and stolen bases.

Norman Earl Claus

Norman Earl Claus, 86, of Colby, died Tuesday, October 22, 2019, at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Denver, CO. He was born February 13, 1933, in Madison County, NE, to Herman and Esther (Schade) Claus. On February 15, 1964, Norman married Vivian Maxwell. Norman worked for the Union Pacific for 39 years most often as a station agent and telegrapher in Colorado, Kansas, and Nebraska. After retirement he delivered flowers for Dillon’s, did volunteer work for Citizens Medical Center and delivered Meals on Wheels. Norman was a member of the Kansas Model Railroaders and enjoyed working with model railroads. Norman loved to talk about his granddaughter and enjoyed collecting John Deere things. He was a member of Trinity Lutheran Church, in Colby.

Norman was preceded in death by his parents; wife Vivian and brother Robert Claus.

He is survived by his son Tony (Lindsay) Claus, Liberal, KS and granddaughter Vivian Claus; brothers Arland (Sandy) Claus, Kenneth (Donna) Claus and Paul (Kathy) Claus and sister Bonnie (Dennis) McMann.

Visitation is 5-7:00 p.m. Friday, October 25, 2019, at Baalmann Mortuary, Colby, with a funeral service at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, October 26, 2019 at Trinity Lutheran Church, Colby. Burial will take place in Beulah Cemetery, Colby. Memorials are suggested to the Trinity Lutheran Church, in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby, KS 67701. For information or condolences visit www.baalmannmortuary.com

Kansas inmates moved safely to prison in Arizona

ELROY, AZ —A group of inmates being relocated to provide relief for the Kansas prison system arrived safely in Arizona, the Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC) announced in a media release Wednesday.

Saguaro Correctional Center in Eloy, Arizona (Photo courtesy CoreCivic)

The group of 120 medium- and maximum-custody inmates were transported to the Saguaro Correctional Center in Eloy, Ariz., by secure air transport, paid for by CoreCivic under the terms of a contract with the State.

Specific details about the transportation of inmates to Arizona will not be disclosed due to security and safety concerns.

“The KDOC has sought to relocate offenders who will be successful and most likely to benefit from the programmatic opportunities available through Saguaro Correctional Center”, said KDOC Deputy Secretary of Facilities Management Joel Hrabe.

KDOC used a screening process that identified offenders who have at least 24 months until release, low frequency of visitation, a need for education/vocational programming, and are medically able.

The KDOC has also posted information for family members athttps://www.doc.ks.gov/facilities/out-of-state-inmates which includes specifics on visitation, mail and other essential information. A staff member in KDOC Central Office has also been designated as a resource for families who have questions about their family member or processes.

The KDOC Office of Victim Services (OVS) has also notified registered victims of those transferred.

“The plan we announced on August 9, 2019 was to move inmates sooner, and in larger numbers,” said KDOC Secretary Jeff Zmuda. “We have been exploring all available options to avoid sending anyone out of state, but ultimately concluded this is the appropriate course. It is my hope that this will be a short-term solution and that we will not have to move additional inmates.”

On October 17, 2019, the KDOC had an inmate population of 9,027 male offenders, which the Kansas Sentencing Commission projects will increase to 10,399 by the end of state fiscal year 2029.

Two from Texas arrested in Phillips Co. on suspicion of credit card fraud

PHILLIPS COUNTY — Just after noon Sept. 26, a report was received from a local business advising that two semis with trailers had used multiple credit cards to obtain fuel, the Phillips County Sheriff’s Office reported.

Yeyser Musibay Gonzalez photo Phillips Co.

Both vehicles traveled through Phillipsburg and split up when they observed patrol vehicles. One went west on Kansas 36 and the other traveled north on U.S. 183, the sheriff’s office said in a social media release Thursday.

Deputies were able to locate both vehicles. One suspect attempted to rid himself of evidence and discarded numerous credit and gift cards which contained stolen credit card information. All discarded items were recovered.

Yeyser Gonzalez Musibay, 42, of Brookshire, Texas, was arrested on suspicion of possession of stolen property, counterfeiting, interference with law enforcement, theft by deception and 22 counts of criminal use of a financial card. He remains in the Phillips County jail in lieu of a $130,000 bond.

The other suspect, Fidel Monesino Cepero, 38, of Houston was arrested on suspicion of possession stolen property, counterfeiting and 22 counts of criminal use of a financial card. He remains in custody in lieu of a $105,000 bond.

All suspects are innocent until proven guilty, the sheriff’s office said.

Corrected 10:30 a.m. Thursday to clarify date of incident.

First woman to officiate for the NFL to appear for FHSU’s speaker series

Sarah Thomas

FHSU University Relations

Sarah Thomas is the first woman to officiate a major college football game, the first full-time female NFL game official and, in January this year, she became the first woman to referee an NFL postseason game.

Thomas will tell her story, “Breaking Through: My Journey to Becoming the First Female NFL Offical,” at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 12, in the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center at Fort Hays State University as part of the university’s Presidential Speaker Series.

Tickets are free but required. Fort Hays State student tickets will be available beginning Tuesday, Oct. 29. The limit is one ticket per person with a valid Tiger ID card. Tickets for the public will be available beginning Tuesday, Nov. 5. The limit is four per person.

They are available at the Memorial Union Student Service Center or by calling 785-628-5306. Tickets will also be at the box office, depending on availability, on the night of the presentation.

In 2017, Thomas described to Elle magazine a kind of accidental beginning to the chain of events that took her to a professional career in the NFL.

Ten years earlier, she was officiating at high school games but was barred from working even junior college games. Then an NFL scout saw her working at a high school championship game and saw something in the way she conducted herself on the field.

The scout, she said, connected her with a retired NFL referee who then got her into NCAA Division 1 football officiating. A year later, in 2007, she was officiating D1 football. She was on her way.

In her appearance at Fort Hays State, Thomas will share her insights on overcoming adversity and odds and “finding your passion while maintaining work-life balance.” She will talk about “succeeding as a female in a male-dominated industry but achieving breakthrough success for males and females alike.”

The Presidential Speaker Series is sponsored by FHSU’s Office of the President and by Fort Hays State students.

FHSU cross country teams ready for MIAA Championships

FHSU Athletics / Allie Schweizer photo

FHSU Athletics

The Fort Hays State men’s and women’s cross country teams travel to Joplin, Mo. this weekend for the 2019 MIAA Cross Country Championships. Missouri Southern will host the championship races at the Tom Rutledge Cross Country Course, located on the edge of the MSSU campus.

The women’s six-kilometer race will open the festivities at 10 a.m. Saturday with the men’s eight-kilometer championship following at 11 a.m.

The Tigers are quite familiar with the course in Joplin after running in events at MSSU three of the last four years.

Three of the four Tigers to earn All-MIAA honors a year ago look to duplicate the honor this year, with Israel Barco, Alex Barbosa and Justin Moore all placing in the top 20 in 2018. The men finished third at the 2018 conference championships, their second-best finish since joining the MIAA, while the women placed fifth a year ago.

Both the men’s and women’s squads have a pair of team titles this season after sweeping the Bronco Stampede and the ESU Invitational. The men’s team heads into the weekend ranked fifth in the latest USTFCCCA Central Region rankings, third-highest amongst MIAA programs.

After traversing five-kilometer courses in their first three races, the women will tackle their first 6K race for of the season on Saturday. Brooke Navarro has the top 5K time for the Tigers this season, finishing eighth at the FHSU Tiger Open in a time of 18:32.3. Abigail Stewart was the top FHSU finisher in the first two races, placing second overall in both competitions.

The men will compete in one more 8K race this week before making the jump to 10 kilometers for the NCAA Central Regional. Robbie Schmidt’s time of 24:57.6 at the FHSU Tiger Open is the best time for a Tiger this season, while Justin Moore and Israel Barco have also been in the top spot for the Tigers at some point this season.

Esther Elaine Likes

Esther Elaine Likes, 94, of Salina, Kansas, passed away Sunday, October 20th, 2019.

Esther was born in Emporia, Kansas on July 4, 1925, a daughter of the late Olive (Weeks) and John Lehnherr.

Esther married Thomas Likes on October 15, 1944 in Emporia, Kansas.

She retired from Salina Orthopedic as the Office Manager.

Survivors include sons, Thomas Dee Likes (Terry) of Larkspur, Colorado, George Alan Likes (Debbie) of El Dorado, Kansas; daughter, Luanne Smith (John) of Brookville, Kansas; five granddaughters, Staci Biskie of Hays, Kansas, Melissa Wescott (Mark) of Topeka, Kansas, Hayley Wildy (Matt) of Kailua, Hawaii, Stacy Polzar (John) of Topeka, Kansas, Karody Robbins (Brett) of Brookville, Kansas; three grandsons, T.J. Likes of Austin, Texas, Grady Likes (Kelly) of Marysville, Indiana, Kirby Smith (Joni) of Goessel, Kansas; 16 great grandchildren; 1 great great grandchild.

She is preceded in death by her husband, and granddaughter, Mandy Likes.

Visitation will be Wednesday, October 23rd from 1:00 pm – 7:00 pm at Carlson – Geisendorf Funeral Home with family present from 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm.

Funeral service will be at 11:00 am, Thursday, October 24th at the funeral home, with Pastor Lori Persigehl officiating. Burial will follow at Brookville City Cemetery Brookville, Kansas.

Donations may be made to Hospice of Salina or the Brookville United Methodist Church, in care of Carlson-Geisendorf Funeral Home, 500 S. Ohio, Salina, Kansas 67401.

Kansas Republican congressmen storm the impeachment inquiry

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans briefly brought the Democrat-led impeachment investigation to a halt when around two dozen GOP House members stormed into a closed-door deposition with a Defense Department official. Democrats said the move compromised national security because some of the Republicans took electronic devices into a secure room.

The protest by Republican lawmakers on Wednesday captured national attention, drawing the focus away from the testimony of a top U.S. diplomat who told lawmakers just a day earlier that he was told President Donald Trump was withholding military aid from Ukraine unless the country’s president pledged to investigate Democrats.

The maneuver delayed a deposition with Laura Cooper, a senior Defense Department official who oversees Ukraine policy, until midafternoon. The interview began roughly five hours behind schedule, after a security check by Capitol officials, and ended after roughly four hours.

As a series of diplomats have been interviewed in the impeachment probe, many Republicans have been silent on the president’s conduct. But they have been outspoken about their disdain for Democrats and the impeachment process, saying it is unfair to them even though they have been in the room questioning witnesses and hearing the testimony.

“The members have just had it, and they want to be able to see and represent their constituents and find out what’s going on,” said Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, the top Republican on the House Oversight and Reform panel. That committee is one of three leading the investigation, and its members are allowed into the closed-door hearings.

Lawmakers described a chaotic scene. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., said she had just walked into the room when the Republican lawmakers blew past Capitol police officers and Democratic staffers. The staff member who was checking identification at the entrance was “basically overcome” by the Republicans, she said.

“Literally some of them were just screaming about the president and what we’re doing to him and that we have nothing and just all things that were supportive of the president,” Wasserman Schultz said.

Later when the deposition began, Cooper answered questions from lawmakers and staffers in response to a subpoena, an official working on the impeachment inquiry said. She explained to lawmakers the process of distributing military aid and was asked whether the appropriate steps were followed on Ukraine, according to a person familiar with the interview.

The official working on the impeachment inquiry and the person familiar with the interview spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door testimony.

“The president’s allies in Congress are trying to make it even more difficult for these witnesses to cooperate,” said Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House intelligence committee.

Democrats deny that Republicans are being treated unfairly, noting they have had equal time to question witnesses and full access to the meetings. Schiff says closed-door hearings are necessary to prevent witnesses from concealing the truth and has promised to release the transcripts when it will not affect the investigation.

They also said the Republicans — several of whom do not sit on one of the three committees — compromised security at Wednesday’s closed-door deposition. The interviews are being held in what is called a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF, which is a secure room where members can hear classified information.

Several lawmakers leaving the facility said that some of the Republicans had their cellphones, even though electronics are not allowed. All members of Congress are familiar with the protocol of the SCIF, since they are often invited to classified briefings, and there are several such rooms around the Capitol.

Several Republicans appeared to be tweeting from the secure room. North Carolina Rep. Mark Walker tweeted: “UPDATE: We are in the SCIF and every GOP Member is quietly listening.”

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee, alleged that Republicans “intentionally brought their electronic devices” into the secure area, violating congressional rules and the oath they take to gain access to classified information.

The “unprecedented breach of security raises serious concerns” for committee chairs who maintain secure facilities in the Capitol, Thompson wrote in a letter to the House sergeant at arms asking for action to be taken against members of Congress involved in the breach.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., criticized his Republican colleagues for the tactic, calling them “nuts” to make a “run on the SCIF.”

“That’s not the way to do it,” he said. Graham later tweeted that he initially believed Republicans had taken the room by force and that it was actually a “peaceful protest,” adding his House GOP colleagues had “good reason to be upset.”

The Republicans who took part in the protest were unbowed. Rep. Steve Scalise, the No. 2 House Republican, said Democrats are running a “Soviet-style process” that should “not be allowed in the United States of America.”

“We’re not going to be bullied,” he said.

The standoff came the day after William Taylor testified that he was told Trump withheld military aid to Ukraine until the country’s president went public with a promise to investigate Democrats. Trump wanted to put Ukraine’s leader “in a public box,” Taylor recalled.

Democratic Rep. Ted Lieu of California said Republicans did not want to hear from Cooper because they were “freaked out” by that testimony.

“They know more facts are going to be delivered that are absolutely damning to the president of the United States,” Lieu said.

Dean Walter Klink

Glade resident Dean Walter Klink passed away Wednesday, October 23, 2019, in the Phillips County Retirement Center, Phillipsburg, at the age of 85.

He was born April 9, 1934 in Speed, KS the son of Walter C. and Louise I. (Kinter) Klink. He served in the Army. He was an electrician for the Coop Refinery in Phillipsburg.

Dean was united in marriage to Bethel J. Hilbrink on January 1, 1956 in Phillipsburg, KS. She survives of the home in Glade, KS.

He was preceded in death by his parents and a daughter, Michelle Klink Ferreira.

Other survivors include his sons, Mitch of Glade, KS and George of Norton, KS.

Funeral services will be 2:00 p.m. Monday, October 28, 2019 in the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, with Pastor Blake Stanwood officiating. Burial with military honors will follow in the Belmont Cemetery, Speed.

Mr. Klink will lie in state from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. Saturday and Noon until 9 p.m. Sunday at the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, 1115 2nd Street, Phillipsburg, KS 67661, where the family will receive friends from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday evening for visitation.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Parkinson’s Foundation or the Phillips County Retirement Center.

Reconstruction of portion of Ash Street continues

(Photos by Hays Post)

City of Hays

On Thursday, J Corp will continue the reconstruction of the western portion of Ash Street from 23rd to 27th Street in Hays by removing the pavement from 24th to 27th Street.

This results in the west side of the intersection of 25th and Ash being closed for two weeks.

Ash Street will still carry one-way traffic northbound in the east lane.

There will be no on-street parking allowed in the construction zone.

The entire project is expected to be complete within the next two week.

The city of Hays regrets any inconvenience this may cause to the public. If there are questions, contact J Corp at 628-8101 or the Office of Project Management at 628-7350.

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