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Shirley M. Sarver

Shirley M. Sarver, age 83, of Plainville, Kansas, died Monday, January 14, 2019, at the Good Samaritan Society of Hays. She was born on August 28, 1935, to Paul and Stella (Purder) Doty. She married Elmer Lee Sarver in 1952, at Natoma, Kansas. He preceded her in death on June 1, 2013.

She was a homemaker and lived most of her life in Plainville, Kansas. She moved to the Good Samaritan Society of Hays in 2017. Shirley was raised on a farm in Rooks County and graduated from Natoma High School.

Survivors include one son, Mikel E. Sarver, Hays, KS; and five grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband; and one daughter, Teresa Sarver; one brother, Leroy Doty and one sister, Pauline Finch.

A private family inurnment will be at the Plainville City Cemetery, Plainville, Kansas.

The family suggests memorial to the Good Samaritan Society of Hays in care of the mortuary.

Services are entrusted to Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601.

Condolences can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or can be sent via e-mail to [email protected]

Kan. man convicted in death connected to botched marijuana deal

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 20-year-old Wichita man has been convicted in the shooting death of another man in what police say was a botched marijuana deal.

Police on the scene of the fatal shooting-photo courtesy KWCH

Mark Holley III was found guilty Monday of first-degree felony murder in the death of 18-year-old D’Shaun Smith. He was also convicted of six other charges.

Holley will be sentenced March 13.

Police have said Smith and an 18-year-old woman connected with Holley met him in a residential neighborhood to buy drugs. Smith later was found dead in the woman’s car.

Holley is facing life in prison on the murder charge.

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SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a murder of a teenager and have a suspect in custody.

Just after 1p.m. Monday, police responded to the 6200 Block of East Orme Street in Wichita after report of a shooting, according to Wichita Police Lt. Todd Ojile during Tuesday’s online media briefing.

Officers found a wounded 18-year-old identified as D’Shaun Smith in a vehicle. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Investigators learned that Smith and a woman in the vehicle had gone to the location to meet an unknown suspect to purchase marijuana.

During the transaction, the suspect attempted to rob the victim, fired a gun, and fled on foot.

Police developed a suspect in the case, set up surveillance at a residence in the area and made an arrest. A suspect identified in the Sedgwick County arrest report as Mark Lewis Holley III, 18, was booked into jail on requested charges of first-degree murder and aggravated robbery, according to police.

Investigators expect to present the case against Holley to the district attorney on Wednesday, according to Ojile.

UPDATE: Kan. governor expands ban on anti-LGBT bias to contractors

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new Democratic governor on Tuesday reinstated a ban on anti-LGBT bias in state agencies’ employment decisions that a Republican predecessor had repealed, and she also expanded the policy to cover government contractors.

Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order was her first official action since taking office Monday and fulfilled a promise she made repeatedly during her successful campaign last year. It bars state agencies from discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity when hiring workers or deciding whether to promote, discipline or fire them.

The move came after a historic wave of victories by LGBT candidates across the nation. In Kansas, Sharice Davids won a congressional seat and state Reps. Susan Ruiz and Brandon Woodard were elected as the Legislature’s first openly lesbian and gay members. All three are Kansas City-area Democrats.

Kelly’s order will apply to departments under Kelly’s direct control, which have about 19,000 employees. But she also extended the policy to companies that have contracts with the state, telling reporters later that if they do work for the state, they ought to follow its rules.

“In a perfect world, we wouldn’t need executive orders like this,” Kelly told reporters during a Statehouse news conference. “It’s important that, until we become a perfect world, that we make sure that we’ve got the kinds of things in place that move it towards perfection.”

Kelly’s move instantly drew praise from national LGBT-rights groups. It came after new Democratic governors in Michigan and Wisconsin issued such orders, as well as Ohio’s new GOP governor.

“They can be open an authentic about who they are, about who their families are and who their loved ones are without fear of retribution of losing their employment,” said Tom Witt, executive director of the LGBT-rights group Equality Kansas, saying he personally knows of seven state workers who lost jobs after previous protections were rescinded.

But extending the anti-discrimination policy to government contactors could prompt a backlash in the Republican-controlled Legislature. House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr., a conservative Kansas City-area Republican, said lawmakers will probably review the order because it applies to private businesses.

“I absolutely think that is a decision the Legislature should be making,” said conservative Rep. Blake Carpenter, a Wichita-area Republican.

Kelly reinstated a policy against anti-LGBT bias in state government that Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius imposed in 2007 through an executive order.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, a vocal opponent of same-sex marriage, rescinded Sebelius’ order in 2015, arguing that state lawmakers should set such a policy. It was clear at the time that the GOP-dominated Legislature and its conservative leaders would not.

The Kansas law barring discrimination in housing and private employment doesn’t cover bias based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

Half a dozen local governments have enacted their own anti-LGBT bias policies, including two Kansas City-area suburbs in December, but the Williams Institute, a think tank at UCLA’s law school focusing on sexual orientation and gender identity policy, said only 12 percent of Kansas residents fall under them.

Woodard and Ruiz said after Kelly’s news conference that they are drafting a bill that would expand the state’s anti-discrimination law.

But expanding the state’s anti-discrimination laws is likely to be a hard sell in the Legislature.

Some conservatives have argued that such an expansion would be used only as a legal club against conservative people of faith. They’ve also questioned whether such a law is necessary and whether anti-LGBT bias is pervasive in employment and housing.

State Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican, called Kelly’s order “anti-liberty” and said it is “degrading to reduce individuals” to their “sexual inclinations.”

“These laws cause divisions in communities and can have serious detrimental and unintended consequences because of their subjective nature,” she added.

Former Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer replaced Brownback last year when Brownback resigned to become U.S. ambassador at large for international religious freedom and signed a measure providing legal protections to adoption agencies that cite faith-based reasons for refusing to place children in homes that violate their religious beliefs.

The legislative debate centered on agencies that won’t place children in LGBT homes. Supporters saw it as religious liberties measure, but Kelly has called it an “adoption discrimination law” and has said she will see whether she legally can avoid enforcing it.

Demonstrating social conservatives’ influence, the Kansas Republican Party adopted a platform last year that declares, “We believe God created two genders, male and female.” The platform also called for an amendment to the U.S constitution barring same-sex marriage, drafted so “judges and legislatures cannot make other arrangements equivalent to it.”

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new Democratic governor has reinstated a ban on anti-LGBT bias in hiring and employment decisions by state agencies and extended it to state government contractors.

Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order Tuesday fulfills a promise she made repeatedly in her successful campaign last year and restores a policy that had been rescinded by a conservative Republican predecessor. It was Kelly’s first official action since taking office Monday.

In 2007, Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius issued an executive order against anti-LGBT bias in state government. In 2015, conservative Republican Gov. Sam Brownback rescinded Sebelius’ order and argued that state lawmakers should set such a policy.

Kelly’s order applies to state agencies under her direct control, which have about 19,000 employees. But it’s broader than the Sebelius policy because it applies to contactors.

FHSU women’s basketball tops national media poll, up to third in WBCA rankings

For the second time in program history, the Fort Hays State women’s basketball team is ranked first in the country according to the latest D2SIDA Media Poll, released Tuesday (Jan. 15). The Tigers also slid up one spot in the WBCA Division II Coaches Poll, climbing to third in the coaches rankings.

Fort Hays State was listed atop nine ballots in the media poll and two in the coaches poll. The Tigers were one of two programs to receive first-place votes in the coaches poll alongside top-ranked Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

The Tigers were previously ranked first in the country in the media poll on December 15, 2015 season after a 9-0 start to the 2015-16 season, including a victory over top-ranked Emporia State. FHSU also spent two weeks atop the coaches poll during the same span.

The Black and Gold are ranked in the top three nationally in the coaches poll for the first time since January 19, 2016. This is the 15th weekly coaches poll in which the Tigers have been ranked in the top five in the nation. FHSU has spent two weeks ranked No. 1 in the country, one week at No. 2, five weeks at No. 3, three weeks at No. 4 and four weeks at No. 5. The Tigers are 7-1 all-time while ranked third in the coaches poll.

Tony Hobson’s squad is the lone MIAA program recognized in the latest media poll, while No. 24 Lindenwood is the only other conference school ranked according to the coaches association.

The Tigers will take their undefeated record on the road again this week, with trips to Emporia, Kan. and Topeka, Kan. on the horizon. FHSU opens the road trip against Emporia State Wednesday (Jan. 16) at 5:30 p.m. inside White Auditorium.

Below are the complete national polls for January 15, 2019.

WBCA Division II Coaches Poll – Week 8 D2SIDA National Media Poll – Week 8
Rk. Team (1st) Rcd. Pts. Prev. Rk. Team (1st) Rcd. Pts. Prev.
1 Indiana (Pa.) (22) 13-0 596 1 1 Fort Hays State (9) 15-0 388 2
2 Drury 15-0 572 3 2 Northwest Nazarene 14-0 374 3
3 Fort Hays State (2) 15-0 551 4 3 Drury (2) 15-0 354 6
4 Northwest Nazarene 14-0 525 5 4 IUP (1) 13-0 353 5
5 UC San Diego 14-0 490 6 T5 Jefferson 17-0 331 7
6 Ashland 14-1 452 7 T5 West Texas A&M (4) 13-1 331 1
7 Union (Tenn.) 15-1 428 8 7 UC San Diego 14-0 306 8
8 West Texas A&M 13-1 409 2 8 Florida Southern 14-1 294 9
9 Grand Valley State 15-1 407 9 9 Union 15-1 251 10
10 Thomas Jefferson Univ. 17-0 384 12 10 Lewis 13-2 246 4
11 University of the Sciences 14-1 373 11 11 USciences 14-1 244 11
12 Alaska Anchorage 13-1 329 14 12 California 13-1 213 13
12 Virginia Union 14-1 329 12 13 Anderson (S.C.) 14-2 204 14
14 Florida Southern 14-1 272 15 14 Grand Valley 15-1 201 12
15 California (Pa.) 13-1 250 16 15 Alaska Anchorage 13-1 177 15
16 Bentley 14-2 236 10 16 Southwestern Okla. 13-1 171 18
17 Southwestern Oklahoma St. 13-1 214 20 17 Virginia Union 13-1 123 19
18 Lewis 13-2 202 17 18 Ashland 15-1 114 20
19 Angelo State 10-2 119 18 19 Colorado Mesa 12-1 111 RV
20 Charleston (W.V.) 13-1 118 25 20 North Georgia 10-2 101 21
21 Anderson (S.C.) 14-2 114 24 21 Bentley 14-2 93 17
22 North Georgia 9-2 82 23 22 MSU Moorehead 14-2 73 23
23 Colorado Mesa 12-1 80 NR 23 Lee 13-3 55 24
24 Lindenwood 11-1 48 NR 24 Angelo State 10-2 37 16
25 Truman State 14-2 33 NR 25 Newberry 11-2 14 25

Gerry Cleary hired as FHSU men’s soccer coach

Cleary won three NAIA national titles at Martin Methodist College

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State University Athletic Director Curtis Hammeke announced on Tuesday the hiring of Gerry Cleary as the new head men’s soccer coach at FHSU. Cleary becomes the second head coach in program history, taking over a program that claimed four of the last five NCAA Central Regional titles and made its first national semifinal appearance in 2018.

“I am excited, grateful and humble to have the opportunity to take the reins of such a great program at such a great school,” said Cleary. “I look forward to building on to such a successful team.”

Cleary has three NAIA national championships to his credit as a head coach, all at Martin Methodist College. He guided the Martin Methodist women’s program to national championships in 2005 and 2007. After coaching the women’s program at Martin Methodist for eight seasons, he took over the men’s program in 2011. Following a combined 21-13-1 in his first two seasons coaching the men’s program, Cleary guided the RedHawks to the national championship in 2013 with a record of 19-2-2. Cleary became the first coach ever in collegiate soccer to win national championships with both a women’s and men’s program at the same school.

As head coach of the women’s program at Martin Methodist, Cleary compiled a record of 137-27-11 (.814) over his eight seasons guiding the program. His teams won seven consecutive conference regular season and tournament titles from 2004 to 2010. As head coach of the men’s program for three seasons (2011-2013), Cleary compiled a record of 40-15-3 (.716) and guided the team to the Southern States Athletic Conference title in 2013. Overall, in 11 seasons as a collegiate head coach, Cleary has a record of 177-42-14 (.790) with 15 conference championships (regular season and tournament combined).

Cleary earned NAIA National Coach of the Year honors three times, twice for women’s soccer (2005 and 2007) and once for men’s soccer (2013). He also earned NSCAA NAIA National Coach of the Year twice, NSCAA Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year twice, and NAIA Region XI Coach of the Year twice. He was the TransSouth Athletic Conference Coach of the Year seven times in his tenure as the women’s coach at Martin Methodist.

Following his third national championship season at Martin Methodist, Cleary moved on to serve as an assistant coach for four years at the NCAA Division I level at California State University-Bakersfield, where he assisted Richie Grant. During his time in Bakersfield, he also served as Director of Coaching for the U.S. Soccer Development Academy Club Central California Aztecs.

“Coach Cleary is highly respected among his soccer coaching peers and brings a great deal of experience and expertise to our men’s soccer program,” FHSU Athletic Director Curtis Hammeke said. “We’re excited about his leadership of our student-athletes moving forward.”

Cleary played for Richie Grant at Lambuth University in Jackson, Tennessee from 1995-98, where he was a three-time All-America and four-time All Mid-South Conference selection. Cleary twice earned Mid-South Conference Player of the Year honors and helped his university to three conference championships.

Cleary received his bachelor’s degree in Health and Physical Education from Lambuth University in 1999. He then earned a master’s degree in Educational, Instructional, and Curriculum Supervision from Christian Brothers University in 2002, where he also served as an assistant coach for both the men’s and women’s soccer programs. Working under head coach Gareth O’Sullivan at Christian Brothers, they won eight Gulf South Conference Championships with both programs combined, finishing with a Division II Women’s National Championship in 2002.

Cleary has also coached Rocket City United in the National Premier Soccer League, located in Huntsville, Alabama. Cleary’s coaching tips have been published multiple times in World Soccer Magazine and World Class Coaching – the world’s leading resource magazine for soccer coaches.

Judge bars citizenship question from 2020 census

NEW YORK (AP) — A federal judge blocked the Trump administration Tuesday from asking about citizenship status on the 2020 census, the first major ruling in cases contending that officials ramrodded the question through for Republican political purposes to intentionally undercount immigrants.

Image courtesy U.S. Census Bureau

In a 277-page decision that won’t be the final word on the issue, U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman ruled that while such a question would be constitutional, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross had added it arbitrarily and not followed proper administrative procedures.

“He failed to consider several important aspects of the problem; alternately ignored, cherry-picked, or badly misconstrued the evidence in the record before him; acted irrationally both in light of that evidence and his own stated decisional criteria; and failed to justify significant departures from past policies and practices,” Furman wrote.

Among other things, the judge said, Ross didn’t follow a law requiring that he give Congress three years notice of any plan to add a question about citizenship to the census.

The ruling came in a case in which a dozen states or big cities and immigrants’ rights groups argued that the Commerce Department, which designs the census, had failed to properly analyze the effect the question would have on households where immigrants live.

A trial on separate suit on the same issue, filed by the state of California, is underway in San Francisco.

The U.S. Supreme Court is also poised to address the issue Feb. 19, meaning the legal issue is far from decided for good.

“We are disappointed and are still reviewing the ruling,” Justice Department spokeswoman Kelly Laco said in a statement.

In the New York case, the plaintiffs accused the administration of Republican President Donald Trump of adding the question to intentionally discourage immigrants from participating, which could lead to a population undercount — and possibly fewer seats in Congress — in places that tend to vote Democratic.

Even people in the U.S. legally, they said, might dodge the census questionnaire out of fears they could be targeted by a hostile administration.

The Justice Department argued that Ross had no such motive.

Ross’ decision to reinstate a citizenship question for the first time since 1950 was reasonable because the government has asked a citizenship question for most of the past 200 years, Laco said.

When Ross announced the plan in March, he said the question was needed in part to help the government enforce the Voting Rights Act, a 1965 law meant to protect political representation of minority groups.

New York Attorney General Letitia James, whose office was among those that litigated the lawsuit, called the decision a win for “Americans who believe in a fair and accurate count of the residents of our nation.”

Ross said politics played no role in the decision, initially testifying under oath that he hadn’t spoken to anyone in the White House on the subject.

Later, however, Justice Department lawyers submitted papers saying Ross remembered speaking in spring 2017 about adding the question with former senior White House adviser Steve Bannon and with then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The U.S. Supreme Court blocked Ross from being deposed, but let the trial proceed, over the objections of Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch.

In a dissent on one of two Supreme Court orders related to the case, Gorsuch wrote there was “nothing unusual about a new cabinet secretary coming to office inclined to favor a different policy direction, soliciting support from other agencies to bolster his views, disagreeing with staff, or cutting through red tape.”

“Of course, some people may disagree with the policy and process,” he wrote. “But until now, at least, this much has never been thought enough to justify a claim of bad faith and launch an inquisition into a cabinet secretary’s motives.”

The constitutionally mandated census is supposed to count all people living in the U.S., including noncitizens and immigrants living in the country illegally.

The Census Bureau’s staff estimated that adding a citizenship question could depress responses in households with at least one noncitizen by as much as 5.8 percent. That could be particularly damaging in states like New York or California, which have large immigrant populations.

Justice Department lawyers argued that the estimate was overblown and that, even if they were true, that didn’t mean Ross exceeded his legal authority in putting the question on anyway.

The administration faces an early summer deadline for finalizing questions so questionnaires can be printed.

🎥 Final change order for 601 Main remodel is ‘deductive’

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Now that the biggest capital projects of the Ellis County Public Building Commission (PBC) have been completed, the group plans to shorten its meeting schedule for 2019.

The group has been gathering monthly. Capital Projects Manager Phillip Smith-Hanes, who is also the Ellis County Administrator, is recommending a change to bi-monthly meetings after February.

Smith-Hanes says window film tint on the front windows and a lock set on a back door still need to be installed at the Extension office building at 601 Main, which was remodeled.

He told the PBC Monday night those two items are in progress.

“I have signed the final change order,” Smith-Hanes said. “I’m happy to report it is a deductive change order. We did not use about $11,150 of our contingency account.”

Smith-Hanes expects the change order to be paid at the PBC’s February 11 meeting.

The PBC is comprised of President Dean Haselhorst and Vice-President Butch Schlyer, who are Ellis County commissioners, along with Secretary Donna Maskus, the Ellis County Clerk, and Ellis County Treasurer Lisa Schlegel as treasurer.

Kan. teen accused of DUI after damage found around town

COWLEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas teen after a hit and run crash.

Truck involved in the alleged weekend DUI crash photo courtesy Cowley Courier Traveler

Just after 2:30a.m. Saturday, police responded to report of an accident in the 1200 Block of North A Street in Arkansas City, according to a media release.

Investigators determined a 2001 Ford pickup truck that was northbound on A Street had struck a parked 2004 Dodge Ram pickup truck in that block. The Ford’s 17-year-old driver was taken into custody.

Later that morning, officers responded to Wilson Park, 701 N. Summit Street, for a report of criminal damage to property. A vehicle had driven over the curb in the 100 block of West Birch Avenue, striking a trash container, grill, picnic table and light-pole fixture within the park. The vehicle then left the scene of the accident.

The possibility that the accident was connected to the prior incident in which a vehicle drove through Wilson Park, damaging multiple pieces of City equipment in the park, remains under investigation.

The teen arrested is accused of driving under the influence of alcohol, according to the relase. He also had no driver’s license, no proof of insurance, was in possession of tobacco by a minor and was transporting an open container of alcohol, according to the release.

Mardi Gras at Hays IHM Church

Mardi Gras Saturday, February 23, 2019; 6-11 p.m.; Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, 1805 Vine St., Hays
6:00 p.m. Doors Open, Full Catered Meal by Chartwells at 6:45 p.m.
Dance & Entertainment by Solitaire (Tim Schumacher)
Price $25 per ticket
Must be 21 to Enter
Open Bar
Tickets on sale NOW at the IHM Parish Office

Fort Hays State alum named superintendent of Hutch schools

Folks

 

HUTCHINSON — Hutchinson USD 308 has its new Superintendent. During Monday’s School Board meeting the board approved on a 7-0 vote to hire Clay County School District Superintendent Mike Folks.  Folks is the district’s 33rd superintendent in its 147-year history. He will begin his new job on July 1 and replaces Gary Price, who has been superintendent for the past two years. Price is on his second tenure in the district and did not desire the position on a long-term basis.

Folks has been superintendent at Clay County Schools, in Clay Center, since July 1, 2005. Clay County Schools has high schools in Clay Center and Wakefield in north central Kansas. Prior to that, he was superintendent at Central Heights USD 288 in Richmond, Kan.

He received a master’s from Pittsburg State University in educational leadership and administration in 2000 and a master’s in higher education/high education administration from Fort Hays State University in 1997.

Board President Kail Denison was pleased to have Folks as the next superintendent.

“We had an excellent candidate pool,” Denison said. “After listening to what the community said they wanted in a superintendent, we feel that Mike is a great match with what the community has asked for.”

He received a masters from Pittsburg State University in educational leadership and administration in 2000 and a masters in higher education/higher education administration from Fort Hays State University in 1997.

“My wife and I are excited to be part of the USD 308 team,” Folks said Monday. “There clearly is a lot of passion in the district. The educational opportunities in Hutchinson are excellent, and we will work together to showcase those opportunities to the community.”

Folks won out over local Haven Superintendent Clark Wedel, Moundridge Superintendent George Leary and Cheney Superintendent David Grover.

Rose M. Heinen

Rose M. Heinen, age 86, left this earthly life on Monday, January 14, 2019 at Cloud County Health Center, Concordia, KS. She was born on Oct. 29, 1932 in Hays, KS to Leonard A. & Kathryn M. (Karls) Spresser.

Rose graduated from St. John’s Catholic High School in Beloit, KS and attended school at Cloud County Community College. Rose married John Heinen and they later divorced, but to this union were born 3 daughters. Rose was primarily a homemaker during her life, raising three daughters in the Concordia, KS area. After raising her daughters, she worked at various occupations in retail and as a receptionist.

Rose moved to Scottsdale, AZ in 1977 where she resided for 30 years and was a member of St. Theresa’s Catholic Church volunteering her time as a lector, Eucharistic minister and bereavement minister. She moved to Salina, KS in 2007 and then to Concordia in 2013. She was involved with the Brown Grand Players and a member of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church.

She is survived by her daughters, Becky Jones, Salina & Shelly Farha (Dan), Concordia; grandchildren, Jericca Richardson (Bobby), John Huseman (Lindsay), Matt Huseman (Jordan), Katie Petric (Tom), Spencer Farha (Amber), Garrett Farha (Amber) & Kelsey Abitz (Jason) & 20 great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents; daughter, Roberta Huseman; brothers, Gerald & Mike Spresser & a sister, Mary Jane Colby.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10:00 am, Thurs., January 17, 2019 at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Church, Concordia with Fr. David Metz officiating. Burial will follow at St. Concordia Cemetery, Concordia. Visitation will be Wed., January 16, 2019 from 1-8 pm with a Vigil service at 6 pm and the family greeting friends after the vigil service all at Chaput-Buoy Funeral Home, Concordia. The family suggests memorials to the Brown Grand Theatre or the O’Connor Animal Shelter in care of the funeral home. For online condolences, please visit www.chaputbuoy.com.

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