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🎥 Hays paranormal groups seeks spirits at Hays Public Library

Steve Stults, Old School Paranormal co-founder and lead investigator, discusses the team’s investigation of the Hays Public Library at a talk Thursday night at the library.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Footsteps in empty rooms, voices in the dark and disembodied voices coming from the other side are a few of the unexplained experiences the members of Old School Paranormal have experienced in their investigations of the unexplained.

Old School Paranormal of Hays investigated the Hays Public Library this summer for reported haunted happenings. They came back to the library Thursday night to present their findings to the public and share more about their otherworldly hobby. If you are a believer, their findings are chilling.

Old School Paranormal team members said they were called in by the library staff to help solve decades of paranormal claims by both patrons and library staff members. Claims included phantom footsteps, books moving on their own, a haunted painting, a man in a purple jumpsuit and claims that long-gone librarians are still tending to their beloved library.

During the night investigation, the paranormal investigators as well as Samantha Gill, adult librarian, and Vera Elwood, young adult services librarian, thought they heard footsteps on the main floor of the library while they were in the basement. The library was closed and locked. When they searched the area, no one could be found.

The investigators used electromagnetic field detectors, which are also known as EMF or K2 detectors, in the building. The theory in ghost hunting is a spirit can alter the electromagnetic field to interact with the living. The devices beep or light up when interacting with a spirit.

Both Gill and Elwood asked the spirits questions while holding the EMF detectors and both devices indicated to very specific questions. This led the librarians and the investigators to believe they might have been in contact with a former female librarian as well as a spirit of a teen boy.

“What was most interesting is that it almost was an intelligible conversation,” said Scott Stults, a team co-founder, lead investigator.

Steve Stults, a team co-founder, lead investigator and Scott’s brother, said “Is it a ghost? Is it somebody who is stuck down there and can’t get out and needs help getting out? We don’t know — possibly, possibly not.”

The investigators, who usually spend all night in a location, only spent four hours at the library and said they would like to come back for an extended probe.

Villisca Ax Murderer House
The team visited the Villisca Ax Murderer House in 2016. Sometime past midnight on Monday, June 10, 1912, a person or persons entered the Moore house in Villisca, Iowa, and used an ax to bludgeon eight sleeping people to death. This included mother and father, Josiah and Sarah Moore, their four children, and two of the children’s young friends. The children ranged in age from 5 to 12.

The killer or killers were never brought to justice, despite a decade-long investigation. Some believe the killer might have jumped a train in Iowa and traveled to other communities, including Ellsworth and Colorado Springs, Colo., and committed more murders.

The team recorded video of what they believe is the murder speaking through a spirit box. The machine rapidly cycles through AM and FM radio stations. The theory is spirits can speak through the white noise.

Voice in the dark
Scott said about 95 percent of the team’s evidence comes from audio recordings. Audio recorders can pick up sounds or what appears to be words or phrases that the team did not hear with the naked ear at the time of the recordings.

The team is made up of five men, which also includes Kevin Sauer, investigator, tech manager, electronics specialist, social media manager; Neal Dreher, investigator and building systems specialist; and John Kreutzer, co-founder, lead investigator, case manager, researcher. However, the men claimed to have recorded children’s and women’s voices during investigations.

“When you capture a woman singing at 3 o’clock in the morning, how do you explain that?” Scott said. “You are out in the middle of nowhere. That is why we do the things we do.”

The team shared a number of EVP, electronic voice phenomenon, they recorded at previous investigations.

At the Ness County Bank, the team thought they heard on a recording a female voice saying, “Please don’t leave us. We need you.”

When Steve was on a previous paranormal team, he recorded at the Midland Hotel in Wilson what they thought was a girl’s voice, saying “Mommy.” There was a fire at the hotel in the early 1900s, and the story goes the ghost of a girl who died in that fire haunts the hotel and pulls on guests’ sheets.

At the Ennis Handy House in Goodland, the team recorded what sounded like a woman singing, “You don’t have to leave. You don’t have to go.”

The spirits also at times seem to aggravate other senses. The team claims they intermittently smelled pipe tobacco in one building they investigated. In another instance, Steve said he felt a searing pain in the back of leg as if he had ben bitten by a dog.

Tools of the trade

Scott Stults, Old School Paranormal co-founder and lead investigator, discusses the team’s equipment with a local resident a the Hays Public Library Thursday night.

Sauer ran the group through some of their other equipment, which included video cameras with night vision, low-tech, old-school witching rods, skeletal mapping software and trigger props, including a small toy train that makes a noise only when it is physically touched.

“Imagine you are somewhere, and I will use Fort Harker as an example,” Scott said. “They have a depot there, so obviously it makes sense to put that train in the depot. Nobody is in there. It’s locked. The curator opens the door and walks in, and that is going off across the room. So what would have prompted that or caused that to go off? That is the paranormal part of it.”

Despite all of the tech, Sauer said the team’s best asset is their own senses.

Scott said, “If you hear something and it sounds like a whistle, you try to figure it out. Maybe you are in a building that was built in 1888, and the windows have some gaps in them and it is windy outside. Just because you hear something doesn’t automatically make it a ghost or spirit.”

Even the believers are skeptics

More of Old School Paranormal’s equipment.

Steve said no one has been able to prove without a shadow of a doubt the existence of ghosts. The team operates on theory. Paranormal is anything outside the realm of normal or what is expected.

“It nutshell, it is the investigation of claims or reports of ghosts or spirits or any paranormal activity.

“There are a lot of instances we are going into places that have claims of doors closing on their own, or you live by yourself and you hear footsteps upstairs in the attic, things like that,” he said. “We are not saying those are ghosts. That is where we come in and try to figure out what the heck is going on.

“If we can’t, with our vast array of devices, come up with an explanation as far as what is going on – that is what paranormal is. It doesn’t mean there is a ghost or anything like that. Paranormal is more than spirits or spooks or whatever you want to call them.”

Scott said paranormal investigation is not like it appears on TV in shows such as “Ghost Hunters.” Those shows take hours or days of video footage and only show viewers the most exciting bits and pieces.

“It is a lot of sitting around in the dark, sometimes people falling asleep. It is a lot of sitting around and waiting,” he said. “When things happen, it is exciting. It’s a rush, but it takes a long time for things like that to kick into gear. Sometimes it doesn’t happen at all.”

Dreher said when you get home you have to go through hours of video or audio even though you believe there is probably nothing on the recordings. It can take the group as long as three months to evaluate all of the audio and video they take during a full investigation.

Future investigations
The team is preparing for an investigation at Fort Riley, the first one of its kind authorized by the military.

The team is always looking for new sites to investigate. It does not charge for investigations, but will accept donations for expenses. This is a hobby for the men, who all have day jobs. They do not claim to be professionals, but they do carry insurance.

The team doesn’t usually investigate outdoor locations because of the environmental distractions. They also require a property owner’s permission and will not trespass. They also typically do not investigate private residences. Most of their investigations are in museums or other historical buildings.

Find out more on the group’s website.

Cloudy, cool Halloween

Today A 30 percent chance of rain, mainly before 8am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 57. Northwest wind around 8 mph.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 34. North northeast wind around 5 mph becoming light and variable.

Thursday Sunny, with a high near 60. West southwest wind 5 to 9 mph.

Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 38. Southwest wind 6 to 11 mph becoming northwest after midnight.

FridayMostly sunny, with a high near 57.

Friday NightMostly cloudy, with a low around 39.

SaturdayA 30 percent chance of rain, mainly after 1pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 60.

Thomas More Prep-Marian announces new baseball coach

Breit
TMP-M

Thomas More Prep-Marian announced Tuesday that Aaron Breit, a 2004 graduate of TMP-M, has accepted the position of head high school baseball coach. He begins his role as the team prepares for the 2018-19 Season.

Breit has coached with Dusty Washburn for several seasons at TMP-Marian.

“He is the brightest baseball mind I know,” Washburn stated when asked about his successor. “My decision to leave was a difficult one and knowing that the program would be in good hands helped me decide to go to FHSU.”

In addition, Washburn added that he is looking forward to the level of play and recruiting aspects that FHSU has to offer. TMP-Marian and Troy Schulte, activities director, thanked Washburn for his time and dedication to the baseball program.

“Dusty did a great job leading the program the past two years, and I wish him the best of luck as he looks to join the FHSU baseball program,” Schulte said.

Breit said he is excited to keep the program moving forward.

When asked about his philosophy he said, “I want to make sure the players stay fundamentally sound in their faith and in life.”

“Coach Breit has been a tremendous asset to the TMP-Marian Baseball Program the past couple of years as an associate head coach and I believe he will provide a seamless transition in taking over as the head coach,” Schulte said. “Coach Breit has great knowledge of the game and more importantly is an outstanding role model for our male athletes.”

Breit lives in Hays with his wife, Jami, and their children — Connor, a fifth grader at Holy Family Elementary; Cy, a preschooler at HFE; and Reed, a future Monarch.

🎥 FHSU football holds weekly football press conference

Fort Hays State Weekly Football Press Conference
October 30th, 2018

Fort Hays State head coach Chris Brown conducted his weekly press conference in advance of the Tiger’s upcoming game with Northwest Missouri State Saturday afternoon in Maryville, Missouri. Brown and select players met with the media inside Lewis Field on Tuesday, a session that can be seen by clicking on the video below.

(00:00 Head Coach Chris Brown, 08:03 Defensive Back Doyin Jibowu, 12:00 Wide Receiver Harley Hazlett) 

 

Hays earns spot on ‘America’s 50 Best Cities to Live’ list

Hays has been named one of the top 50 cities to live in, according to a story published earlier this month by 24/7 Wall St.

McPherson also made the list, which is made up of mostly smaller communities across the United States.

Hays ranked 45th on the list, while McPherson was ranked 24th.

The ranking considered factors such as population change, median home value and median household income.

Click HERE to read the story.

Hays High National Honor Society welcomes 40 new members

By ISABELLE BRAUN
HHS Guidon

National Honor Society (NHS) accepted 40 members on Oct. 26 after a panel of teachers reviewed anonymous applications.

“We stripped the names out of all of the documents, so that the review committee, looking through all of their applications and their references, didn’t know who the student was ” NHS sponsor Cheryl Shepherd Adams said. “We just looked at their qualifications.”

Those admitted include juniors Carson Ackerman, Mulu Bannister, Joanna Carillo, Hanna Dannar, Moriah DeBey, Landon Dinkel, Nathan Erbert, Megan Flavin, Emily Goetz, Lynsie Hansen, Dellilah Herrera, Levi Hickert, Allison Hillebrand, Arecely Hutchinson, Brandon Kennemer, Nathan Leiker, Madeline Lohmeyer, Yesenia Maldonado, Peyton Niernberger, Tasiah Nunnery, Abbey Oborny, Ashton Ottley, Savannah Pfeifer, Cassidy Prough, Olivia Reed, Isabel Robben, Sierra Adkins, Colton Vajnar, Madelyn Waddell and Taylor Weidenhaft. Seniors include Brett Bowles, Loganne Ditter, Johnny Fuller Jr., Hannah McGuire, Macy Nowlin, Lindsey Pfannenstiel, Rebekah Porter, Savannah Schneider, Cole Schroeder and Cade Swayne.

Those who applied had to fill out an application about themselves, answer questions about their own community service and provide two reference forms. There were 60 people who applied this year.

“We only had 50 last year,” NHS sponsor Kayla Brown said. “I would say it’s probably one of the bigger groups, I would guess.”

The NHS induction ceremony will take place on Nov. 6 in the Lecture Hall at Hays High.

“There were a lot of tough decisions we had to make,” Shepherd Adams said. “I think we have a really good group.”

No charges following KBI investigation at Phillips County Sheriff’s Office

PHILLIPS COUNTY — In August, the Phillips County Sheriff’s Department reported the Kansas Bureau of Investigation was investigating a former sheriff’s department employee.  A deputy assigned to investigate the allegations against the former employee was also allegedly implicated.

On Monday, Phillips County Attorney, Melissa Schoen and Phillips County Sheriff Charles Radabaugh reported the KBI report on allegations of wrong doing against members of the Phillips County Sheriff’s Office had been reviewed and officials determined that no charges will be filed.  The allegation is unsubstantiated.

The KBI in the course of their investigation interviewed multiple witnesses including Phillipsburg Mayor Lance Munyon, Timothy Driggs, Phillipsburg Public Works Supervisor, Travis Wagoner, Daniel Denio, Amy Hanchett, Nicole Wagner, and James Hageman, according to the social media report from the sheriff’s department.

The state has determined after a thorough review of reports submitted by the KBI that there is no verifiable crime committed involving any employee past or present of the Phillips County Sheriff’s Office.

The allegations of burglary and theft by department employees are unfounded.
Through the course of their investigation the KBI could not determine if a video ever existed as only one witness who claimed to see the alleged video later recanted his statement.

Due to privacy concerns and possible pending civil litigation, officials were not going to release the report in its entirety, according to the sheriff’s department.

UPDATE: Special USD 489 meeting Thursday focuses on mistaken pay raises

Update: The special board meeting to deal with the pay issue has been scheduled for noon Thursday in the Toepfer Board Room at the Rockwell Administration Center.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Certain USD 489 staff members received a pay increase that was not approved by the USD 489 school board and could have to pay some of that money back.

Classified staff and administrators received a pay increase in July of 4.6 percent.

“That never should have happened,” Superintendent John Thissen said Monday. “That 4.6 percent should have never happened.”

This did not include custodians or paraprofessionals.

Custodians were in their final year of negotiations with its union, SEIU, and the board has already approved a contract that included a 4.6 percent raise for 28 people under that contract. The board also approved a $2 per hour increase for paraprofessionals beginning this school year in attempts to recruit and retain more staff in these special education positions.

The board has offered teachers a 3.6 percent pay increase, but those contract negotiations have reached impasse. The teachers say they want the 4.6 percent raise the rest of the staff has received.

Thissen said administration and classified staff raises are usually approved by the board after contract negotiations are concluded with the teachers. Administration and classified staff are usually given the same raise as teachers.

The school board now must decide if it wishes to officially give the administrators and classified staff the 4.6 percent raise, the 3.6 percent raise it is offering teachers or some other pay increase that has not yet been identified.

If the board approves a raise less than the 4.6 percent the classified staff and administrators are currently receiving, those staff members would essentially have to pay back the difference. This would take the form of wage reductions until the excess pay was accounted for.

The director of finance position for the district is currently open, but Thissen said the pay mistake occurred before Tracy Kaiser, former finance director, left her post. Thissen took responsibility for the pay error, saying the mistake originated in his office.

Alley cleanup completed except for tree limbs

CITY OF HAYS

The Hays residential alley cleanup has been completed except for tree limb pick up in a small area.

Remaining tree limbs will be picked up Tuesday, October 30, 2018.

The annual event started Oct. 22 with curbside pick up.

For more information contact the Hays Public Works Dept. at 785-628-7350.

Kansas game wardens: Suspect admits stealing tree stands

TREGO COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for alleged theft.

Photo courtesy KDWP&T Game Wardens

Kansas game wardens received information from the Trego County Sheriff’s Office of two tree stands that were stolen from property in Trego County, according to a social media report from the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks game wardens. Authorities also had a photo of an unidentified individual trespassing on the property.

The Ness and Trego County game wardens were able to identify the individual in the photo and get a confession from him admitting to stealing the tree stands. The stolen stands were retrieved and charges are pending in Trego County.

HAWVER: Time to start thinking about drawing new legislative districts

Martin Hawver
We’ve come to the point in the campaigns that political ad after political ad after political ad drag on long enough that there’s time to microwave popcorn and not miss the cop show on television.

Yes, and for those of you who have other things to think about during the commercials…one of those thoughts might just be what happens to the Kansas Legislature after the next federal census in 2020.

That’ll be the 24th national census, and it is designed to tell us what the population of the nation is, and where those people are located—and likely whether Kansas remains a four-congressional district state.

Is that official April 1, 2020, head count a little far off? Why think about it now? Well, if you live in one of those Kansas House or Senate districts out west, say, west of US-81, the north-south Interstate that is the dividing line between western Kansas and eastern Kansas, you might want to start thinking about it now.

It’ll be 2022 when the first statewide election occurs after the census, based on that federal census and where it says the people are. That’s the key data for reapportionment of Kansas House and Senate districts. Oh…and the state’s four congressional districts.

And that reapportionment is based on U.S. Census population data which the Legislature will spend more than a year dissecting into 40 Senate districts and 125 House districts, and, yes, those four Congressional districts.

What’s worth thinking about now ahead of that reapportionment? Probably for much of western Kansas it’s what the Republican Party efforts to further regulate immigration and the “close the border” talk has to do with populations out west of US-81.

Yes, it is western Kansas, with its agriculture and food processing industry that stands the best chance of seeing foreign workers not participating in the census or maybe misstating their legal citizenship for fear of deportation. Oh, and there are lots of foreign-born workers and their children in other parts of the state, too.

Now, the GOP and President Donald Trump make a decent case that immigrants should come across the border with Mexico legally. They ought to get the visas and such, and probably some clearly defined path to becoming a full United States citizen, with a stake in how this country is run, and the right to vote.

But this concentration on immigration, while a strong national political issue, will undoubtedly have some effect on head count in the census.

So, if the historic trend of adults and their children moving out of western Kansas is accelerated by federal immigration regulation that makes the census inaccurate, count on many who have come to this country and state for a better life to decide just not to participate.

And that means likely less census-counted population in parts of western Kansas, and by the time the Legislature has mapped out new House and Senate districts based on population, fewer state representatives and senators from areas where the population count is down.

That means fewer, and larger, Kansas House and Senate districts out west, and likely more districts in urban areas of eastern Kansas—Wichita, Topeka, and Missouri-bordered northeast Kansas counties.

Now, it’s based on population, and that’s fair, but it likely means less attention will be paid to western Kansas (except for highways) and more attention to population-heavy areas based on their representation in the House and Senate because the members of the House and Senate will be tilted toward urban areas—which, by the way, are easier to jerrymander based on voter political registration.

Something to think about during those commercials, isn’t it?

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

SCHLAGECK: Vote on Nov. 6

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
As the 2018 election races toward the finish line on Nov.6, candidates from both parties have stooped to their old tricks of slinging mud, name calling and finger pointing at one another. Why can’t candidates do what’s right for this nation and focus on issues?

Instead, we are forced to put up with elected officials who pursue their own agendas, grow the government, do-nothing and engage in gridlock.

What Kansas and this nation sorely need is leadership and a willingness among all elected officials to work together for the good of this country.

What do you think the framers of our constitution and this republic would say about what’s going on in all three branches of government today?

What would Washington, Hamilton and Jefferson think about our way of conducting the nation’s business?

What would Kansas’s own favorite son, Dwight D. Eisenhower say about the way we’re conducting this country’s business today?

What about Frank Carlson, Alf Landon, Andy Schoeppel and other Kansas leaders of yesteryear think?

Profound?

Enlightening?

Telling?

Absolutely.

Where are the ideas for leading and uniting this great state and nation?
Isn’t that what they’re supposed to be doing?

Farmers, ranchers and businessmen cannot, and do not want to engage in the same game of blaming one party for the charade going on in Washington and among some of our own state leaders. This is a shared shame and a weakness that is ruining our state and nation.

In spite of claims to the contrary, taxes continue to increase. The only way for the tax-and-spend cycle to be broken is to hold candidates accountable. The citizenry of Kansas and this country must demand candidates clearly state their positions on the issues.

Today’s politicians and most of the candidates have become so adept at ducking the issues. They rival a young Muhammad Ali’s ability to float like a butterfly, always out of reach and accountability.

Not only do voters rarely have a chance to ask candidates questions, they have even less chance of receiving a worthwhile answer.

Some candidates also talk out of both sides of their mouth. They tell one gathering of voters one thing and others just the opposite.

They also barrage voters with wave after wave of rhetoric, hoping to obscure their real views. They’re not called politicians for nothing.

This year’s election is just around the corner. Whether we like what’s been happening in government or not, the mess we’re in remains our own.

It’s our system, and while it may appear broken, we still must vote. Past elections demonstrate rural voters can make a difference by their willingness to go to the polls.

Fiscal responsibility, a reduction in the size of government and increased productivity remain a sound prescription for this country’s economic troubles. The bigger problem of cooperation and compromise while working together for the good of this country must be addressed as well – if these remedies are to work.

Urge your friends, family and neighbors to cast their votes Nov. 6. Vote your heart, mind and the issues – not just party lines.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

LETTER: Authentic Volga German cuisine a treat

My husband and I visited Hays recently and had planned to eat at Das Essen Hütte, as I couldn’t wait to taste food I’d stood in long lines for in my college days, many Octoberfests past.

Wow! It was even better than we’d expected!

I asked about and complimented the amazing, early photos depicting the Catharine farms and families of the owners, while we waited a short time for our sampler platters of 4 choices each. We were blown away by the delicious (and creeeamy!) entrees. I’d expected them to be somewhat identical, but they were, in fact, quite individual.

Why has it taken until recent years to have an authentic Volga German cuisine restaurant in its Motherland of Ellis County, Kansas? After being told of slow nights, we suggested delivering bierochs to FHSU campus and building a following with the nearby, but seemingly oblivious, students. Otherwise, I believe the locals will definitely come in time. It’s that good! Hays, please keep this Ellis County original by talking them up!

Heather and Dave Faulkner
Chipita Park, Colo.

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