Document 6573904

Transcription

Document 6573904
For the record
A6
The Hays Daily News
Monday, Oct. 27, 2014
Watch for breaking news at
HDNews.net
Markets
Hays cash grains
Courtesy: Golden Belt Co-op
Local cash wheat . ..............................5.51
Local cash milo . .................................3.36
Oil
$ per barrel
Kansas Crude (Thursday).............. $71.75
NY Spot Crude . ............................. $80.33
shooting,
from A1
The adults who had lined
up to talk at the event — the
mayor, the school-district
superintendent, the police
chief and others — repeated
a similar message: The community would get through
the tragedy; it wouldn’t be
easy, but they would get
through it.
But hearing and seeing
Victoria — and the many
like her — people couldn’t
help but wonder how deep
the emotional damage had
gone and how long it would
last.
She dug into her purse
and found a box of Kleenex.
She was using her hands to
wipe her tears; the tissues
were for her mom, sitting
nearby.
Three wounded students
remained hospitalized in
Everett and Seattle.
Shaylee Chuckulnaskit, 14,
was in critical condition at
Providence Regional Medical
Center. Hospital officials said
Sunday she was “receiving
ongoing, continual monitoring and care.”
Andrew Fryberg, 15, was
in critical condition in the
intensive-care unit at Seattle’s
Harborview Medical Center,
hospital spokeswoman
Susan Gregg wrote in a news
release.
The third injured teen,
Nate Hatch, 14, was also in
Harborview’s intensive-care
unit but his condition was
improving, according to
Gregg. He was listed in serious condition in the hospital’s
trauma center.
The Snohomish County
Medical Examiner’s Office
has not released the name of
the girl killed in the rampage,
but she was identified as Zoe
Galasso by a family friend.
Investigators are still
searching for a motive for
the shooting. On Sunday, the
Snohomish County Sheriff’s
Office released no new information on the investigation.
The meeting in the school
gym offered students a
chance to split into smaller
groups so they could talk
about their feelings with
counselors. The parents did
the same, in another room.
One of those counselors was Randy Vendiola,
there with his wife, Monica.
They’re both Native Americans, and Monica is a member of the Tulalip Tribes,
just like Jaylen Fryberg and
several of the victims.
Randy Vendiola said he
knew Fryberg’s family.
“He was a hunter. He
provided for his family: elk,
deer,” he said. “He was a
fisherman. He led ceremonies.”
And, what happened?
“Only God knows. Only
in the U.S. do we see children
shooting other children. In
Russia, it’s terrorists. Here,
kids.”
Sophomore J.T. Torrey, 16,
was there with his parents,
James and Debby Torrey. J.T.
said he had just finished his
English class when he heard
gunshots. He began running outside, and then finally
sought safety in a classroom.
J.T. said what one hears
a lot in these interviews: “I
never thought it’d be at my
school.”
With classes canceled at
Marysville-Pilchuck for the
week, J.T. looked ahead to
the following week when the
school reopens.
“I probably won’t go to that
cafeteria for the rest of the
year. It’d be eerie to go back.”
With the other Marysville
School District schools open
this week, Marysville police
announced Sunday night
they would increase officer
presence at the other schools
so students and staff members can feel safe.
Obituaries
Marion Joseph Bollig Sr.
cil No. 1325, a Fourth Degree Member of the Bishop
Marion Joseph Bollig Sr.,
Cunningham Knights of
83, Hays, died Thursday, Columbus, and a member of
Oct. 23, 2014, one
the parish’s cleaning group
day before his
known as the “heavenly dustbirthday, at his ers.” He was a member of
home.
American Legion Post No.
He was born 173 and Veterans of Foreign
Oct. 24, 1930, in Hays to
Wars Post No. 9076.
Frank and Mary (Basgall)
He enjoyed his family,
Bollig. He
spending time together, inwas a 1948
cluding camping and boating
graduate of
at Cedar Bluff Reservoir and
Hays High
Wilson Lake; and travelSchool.
ing across the country in
He martheir Winnebago. Colorado
ried Shirley
in the summertime was a
Dreiling
favorite of the family, with
in 1957
stops at national forests in
in Hays. They celebrated
every region of the state. He
their 57th anniversary last
was an avid sports fan and
month. He worked for the
helped coached Little League
same employer his entire
baseball and football. He
life, beginning as a driver
had many interests including
and gauger under the name
autos, Western-themed televiof H.M. Popp Oil Co., and
sion shows, sports of any
later as a manager for the
kind (especially those involvcompany when it was sold to ing the Kansas Jayhawks) and
Permian Oil Corp., a division artistry in all mediums and
of Occidental Petroleum Co. enjoyed watching television
He was loyal and dedicated
with a big wooden bowl of
to his country, achieving the
popcorn cradled in his arm.
rank of sergeant during the
Survivors include three
Korean War and later servsons, Marion Joseph Jr. and
ing in the National Guard.
wife, Linda, Baldwin, Jeff
While in the Army, he parand wife, Laurie, Overland
ticipated in swimming and
Park, and John, Hays; two
diving competitions, a talent daughters, Coleen Starling
first perfected at Massey
and husband, Berry, Raleigh,
Playground in Hays.
N.C., and Camille Ellard,
He was a member of St.
Hays; 11 grandchildren,
Joseph Catholic Church,
Dane Schuckman, Spencer
served on the parish council
Schuckman, Stuart Schuckand as a lector, was a Third
man and Chelsea Jones, all
Degree member of the
of Raleigh, Anna Bollig and
Knights of Columbus Coun- Thomas Bollig, Baldwin,
fundraiser,
Other volunteers arrive
throughout the morning.
Some stay all morning; others
for an hour or two, depending
on their schedule.
More batches of dough are
mixed throughout the morning while other volunteers,
such as Judy Schuler, cut out
the dough circles where others
placed a spoonful of filling.
It was Schuler’s first time
volunteering at the event
and her first time making
bierocks.
It was a day off from school
for students and teachers, but
some, such as freshman Ashlyn Pfeifer and her mother,
Kathy Pfeifer, TMP English
teacher, volunteered.
“It’s a huge endeavor,”
Kathy Pfeifer said of the
fundraiser.
She’s never made bierocks
before and was happy to learn
how to make a bierock.
“My family at home is
excited about it,” Pfeifer said.
While the bierocks are being made in the kitchen, others work in an adjacent room
smoothing the kuchen dough
into the pan and ladling one
of three fillings — cherry,
peach and blackberry, also
known as Schwarzeberren.
“You can’t buy canned
blackberries, so they’re donated by Jim and Susan Werth,
Kathy Rohr and Dorothy
Moeder,” Brull said.
It was Carli Fischer’s job to
spray oil in the kuchen pans,
so the baked goods didn’t
stick. Carli, 9, a student at St.
Mary in Ellis, had the day off
from school and came with
her mother, Sarah Fischer.
“I work at the (Hays) hospital, so I bring my daughter
ebola,
William “Bill” Roth, 81,
Dighton, formerly of Victoria and
Russell, died Friday, Oct. 24,
2014, at Lane County Hospital,
Dighton.
Services will be at 10:30 a.m.
Tuesday at St. Theresa Catholic
Church; burial in Dighton Memorial Cemetery, with military rites
by American Legion Post No.
Kyle Bollig and Courtney
Bollig, Overland Park; Carrie
Ellard, London, England,
Cheyenne Ellard and Kirsten
Ellard, Hays; a great-granddaughter, Charlie Jones; a
great-grandson, Cooper
Schuckman, Raleigh; his
in-laws, Everett Knowles
and wife, Helen and Doug
Hazelton and wife, Margie,
all of Lake Havasu, Ariz.; his
sisters-in-law, Norma Bollig
and husband, Elmer, Bollig,
Hays, and Juanita Bollig and
husband, Cecil, Dallas; and
countless nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death
by his parents; five brothers,
Robert, Elmer, John, Frank
and Cecil; and seven sisters
Delores (who died as an
infant), Marcella McCullom,
Helen Knowles, Frances
Wooldridge, Margaret
Hazelton, Dena Obholtz and
Clara Walters.
Services will be at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at St. Joseph
Catholic Church; burial in
St. Joseph Cemetery, with
military honors by Hays
Additional services
190 and Kansas Army Reserves
National Guard. Visitation will
be until 5 p.m. Monday, both
at Boomhower Funeral Home,
Dighton. A vigil will be at 7 p.m.
Monday at the church.
Lucine E. Albers, 87, Oakley,
died Friday, Oct. 24, 2014.
Services will be at 10 a.m.
VFW Post No. 9076 and
American Legion Post No.
173.
Visitation will be from 4 to
8 p.m. Tuesday and from 9
to 9:45 a.m. Wednesday, both
at Hays Memorial Chapel
Funeral Home, 1906 Pine,
Hays, KS 67601.
A Daughters of Isabella
rosary will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday, a vigil at 6:30 p.m., followed by a combined Third
Degree St. Joseph Council
No. 1325 and Bishop Cunningham Fourth Degree
Knights of Columbus rosary
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home.
Memorials are suggested to St. Joseph Catholic
Church, Hospice of Hays
Medical Center or Humane
Society of the High Plains in
care of the funeral home.
Condolences can be left
for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.
Mereata Baldwin
Mereata Baldwin, 101,
Palco, died Monday, Oct. 27,
Tuesday at United Methodist
Church, Oakley.
Obituary policy
The Hays Daily News will publish an obituary free for people
with direct ties to the area. More
information can be added for
additional charges.
2014, at Dawson Place, Hill
City.
Arrangements are pending
at Plumer-Overlease Funeral
Home, Plainville.
Sandra S. Dolezal
Sandra S. Dolezal, 64, Hill
City, died Sunday, Oct. 26,
2014, at Graham County
Hospital, Hill City.
Arrangements are pending
at Stinemetz Funeral Home,
Hill City.
Patricia Ann Ruff
Patricia Ann Ruff, 68,
rural Logan, died Saturday,
Oct. 25, 2014, at Logan
Manor Nursing Home.
Services will be at 10:30
a.m. Wednesday at Logan
Funeral Home; burial in
Prairie Dale Cemetery, Graham County.
She will lie in state from 5
to 9 p.m. Monday and from
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday,
with family present from 7 to
8:30 p.m., both at the funeral
home.
from A1
JOLIE GREEN • Hays Daily News
Judy Schuler, right, religion teacher at Thomas More Prep-Marian High School, rolls out dough for bierocks while Kelly
Schmidt fills the dough with meat Friday at TMP.
(Shaylee Fischer) to TMP,”
Sarah Fisher said.
Sarah’s father, Bob Leikam,
teaches junior high social
studies and is vice principal, and her mother, Trudy
Leikam, is a cook at the
school.
Lee Staab, a 1954 graduate of TMP forerunner St.
Joseph’s Military Academy,
volunteered for the first time
this year. He’s looking forward
to when his grandchildren,
ages 7 and 10, likely will be
TMP students.
He doesn’t cook at home,
but had no trouble with his assigned job sprinkling the topping on the pans of kuchen.
“It’s pretty basic,” he said.
Sandy Losey and the
school’s kitchen staff coordinate the volunteers and
cooking event.
It’s usually easy to get
volunteers, but the 6 a.m. shift
sometimes poses challenges,
Losey said.
George Gatschet, a 1957
graduate of SJMA, was on
clean-up duty for dishes and
counters.
Gatschet volunteers not
only for the fundraiser, but
“he volunteers in the kitchen
almost every day,” Brull said.
Still more volunteers came
in the afternoon to package
the baked goods for pick up
by those who ordered them.
All of the money raised
goes to the school’s transportation fund. Brull wasn’t sure
how long the school has been
having the fall fundraiser, but
it replaced fundraising breakfasts that had been taking
place for the purpose.
“Every year the process
gets better,” he said. “A lot of
the same people volunteer.”
Last year, the project
raised approximately $8,000.
Using money from the fund,
the school added two new
14-passenger buses last year.
“That way, we don’t have
to use the big buses,” Brull
said. “It gives us flexibility.”
from A1
As controversy grew over
how to handle health care
workers, the nurse who has
been the first person subjected
to quarantine called her treatment in New Jersey “inhumane.” New York Mayor Bill
de Blasio said the nurse had
been mistreated.
Kaci Hickox, a nurse and
epidemiologist for Doctors
Without Borders, returned
from Sierra Leone on Friday
and was detained at Newark
International Airport. She
has been held since then in
what she described to CNN’s
Candy Crowley as a “tent
structure” outside University
Hospital in Newark, N.J.,
with a portable toilet and no
shower.
“I feel physically completely strong and emotionally completely exhausted,”
she said, noting she has no
fever or any other symptom
of the disease. “This is an
extreme that is really unacceptable, and I feel like my
basic human rights have been
violated.”
Doctors Without Borders
said the tent was not heated,
“I don’t believe that when
as serious as this that we can
Christie told the “Fox News
“and she is dressed in uncomfortable paper scrubs.”
you’re dealing with something count on a voluntary system.” Sunday” program.
Hickox’s lawyer, Norman
Siegel, a former New York
Civil Liberties Union execuMonday, October 27, 2014
tive director, said he would go
to court to seek her release.
De Blasio likened her to
a “hero, coming back from
the front” — using a word
also used by Fauci and other
administration officials. De
can-American general in the US Air Force.
By HistoryNet.com
Blasio said Hickox had been
1962, American U-2 reconnaissance plane shot
On this date:
“treated with disrespect, was
1907, The first trial in the Eulenberg Affair ends in down by a surface-to-air missile over Cuba, killing
treated as if she has done
the pilot, Maj. Rudolf Anderson, the only direct
Germany.
something wrong, which she
1917, 20,000 women march in a suffrage parade in human casualty of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
hasn’t.”
New York. As the largest state and the first on the 1962, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev offers to
The mayor made his comEast Coast to do so, New York has an important ef- remove Soviet missile bases in Cuba if the U.S.
ments at a mid-afternoon
fect on the movement to grant all women the vote removes its missile bases in Turkey.
news conference at Bellevue
1964, The political career of future US president
in all elections.
Hospital in Manhattan, where
1922, In Italy, liberal Luigi Facta’s cabinet resigns Ronald Reagan is launched when he delivers a
the city’s only Ebola patient,
after threats from Mussolini that “either the gov- speech on behalf of Republican presidential canDr. Craig Spencer, is being
ernment will be given to us or we will seize it by didate Barry Goldwater.
treated. A spokesman for the
marching on Rome.” Mussolini calls for a general 1971, The Democratic Republic of the Congo rehospital said the doctor was in
named Zaire.
mobilization of all Fascists.
“serious, but stable condition”
1927, Fox Movie-tone news, the first sound news 1986, London Stock Exchange rules change as
and “looking a little bit better
Britain suddenly deregulates financial markets, an
film, is released.
than he looked yesterday.”
1941, In a broadcast to the nation on Navy Day, event called the Big Bang.
De Blasio also appeared with
President Franklin Roosevelt declares: “America 1988, US President Ronald Reagan decides to tear
Cuomo on Sunday night.
has been attacked, the shooting has started.” He down a new US Embassy in Moscow because SoEarlier in the day, Christie
does not ask for full-scale war yet, realizing that viet listening devices were built into the structure.
defended the quarantine policy
many Americans are not yet ready for such a step. 1997, Stock markets crash around the world over
he and Cuomo had ordered
1954, Benjamin O. Davis Jr. becomes the first Afri- fears of a global economic meltdown.
after Spencer’s diagnosis.
Today History
In