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Larks Beat El Dorado on Walkoff Home Run

Desmond Roberts hit a towering home run to right field in the bottom of the 11th inning to lift the Hays Larks to an 8-7 win over the El Dorado Broncos Friday night at Larks Park. The homer came one pitch after Broncos manager Chad Gerwick was ejected for arguing with the home plate umpire.

The Larks trailed 7-5 entering the bottom of the ninth before rallying with two runs to force extra innings. Mackenzie Handel tied the game with a blooper to left field over a drawn in infield.

The Larks have now won three straight and improve to 6-1 and 2-1 in the Jayhawk League. The Broncos lose for the first time and fall to 5-1 overall and 3-1 in the league.

The two teams play again Saturday and Sunday at 7pm. Y0u can hear Sunday’s game on 14-KAYS beginning at 6:45pm.

Governor signs KPERS Omnibus Bill

Screen Shot 2013-06-07 at 6.57.36 PMGovernor Sam Brownback signed House Bill 2213 Friday while attending the Kansas State Council of Fire Fighters 67th Annual Conference & Educational Workshop at the Ramada Inn in Topeka.

Known as the 2013 KPERS Omnibus bill, House Bill 2213 modifies the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System, the Retirement System for Judges, and the Kansas Police and Fireman’s Retirement System.

In particular, this new law raises the cap on maximum retirement benefits from 80% to 90% of final average salary and increases the employee contribution rate from 7% to 7.15% for all years of service to self-fund the benefit increase from the active KP&F employees. It also makes firefighters and police officers who have at least 32 years of service eligible for these changes. Prior to this new law, once a KP&F member reached 32 years of service, their allowed contribution rate dropped to 2%

Firefighters at the conference told the Governor they had been working ten years to get the changes made.

“Firefighters and police officers risk their lives every day for the betterment and safety of our Kansas communities. They deserve a retirement benefit that is fair to all who serve, no matter how long they serve,” Governor Brownback said.

Governor Brownback also signed Senate Bill 246, which reconciles amendment to statutes that have been amended more than once during the 2013 Legislative Session and previous sessions.

Friday’s signings bring the total number of bills signed this session to 133

Police: Man Electrocuted Trying to Steal Copper

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(AP) — Police in Wichita believe a man found dead near a utility pole was electrocuted while trying to steal copper.

A passer-by called 911 after finding the body Friday afternoon in southern Wichita.

Police Lt. Dennis Wilson says a bicycle was leaning against a power pole. A flashlight and bolt cutters were found nearby.

Investigators believe the man attempted to cut a 7,200-volt power line and was electrocuted sometime overnight.

The man was thought to be in his 20s. He was not immediately identified.

Uncovering the Past

State Archeologist Bob Hoard talks to Hays resident Bud Eulert about his Indian artifacts from Russell and Rice Counties.
State Archeologist Bob Hoard talks to Hays resident Bud Eulert about his Indian artifacts from Russell and Rice counties.

The archeological dig south of Hays is about half completed.

It’s the site of this year’s Kansas Archeology Training Program Field School, headed by the Kansas Historical Society and the Kansas Anthropological Society.

Professionals are working with about 130 volunteers at the presumed site of the Billy Dixon Trading Post.

Wednesday night, area residents were invited to bring their own archeological artifacts  to the Hays National Guard Armory archeologists examined the specimens at no cost.

Bud Eulert, Hays, has been collecting arrowheads and other Indian artifacts for most of his life.  Eulert has purchased some of his collection, but his favorites turned up on his own farmland in Russell County:

archeology dana
Dr. Timothy Weston, Kansas State Historic Preservation Office, examines points collected in Ellis County by Dana Kraus.

Artifacts from the dig site south of Hays are being processed at Fort Hays State University.

The public is invited to presentations Friday and Saturday nights about Billy Dixon and buffalo hunters.  The discussions start at 7:30p.m. in Albertson Hall Room 169.

A project summary will be given Friday, June 14, by lead investigator Steve Roberts at the KSU Agriculture Research Center Auditorium at 7p.m.

Higher Ed Funding Cuts a Mistake?

Sam_Brownback_official_portrait1(AP) – Gov. Sam Brownback says his office is reviewing budget legislation sent to him by Kansas legislators to determine if he can veto cuts in higher education spending.

Brownback told reporters Friday he’s not sure he can use the governor’s power to veto individual line-items to eliminate the cuts approved by lawmakers.

The Legislature cut funding for state universities by 1.5 percent for each of the next two fiscal years. Lawmakers also placed restrictions on funding for salaries across state government.

Kansas Public Radio reports (https://bit.ly/18U2umW ) the Legislature’s nonpartisan research staff said the budget was written so that cuts in higher education aren’t in separate lines that can be vetoed without eliminating all funding for each university.

Brownback had proposed keeping higher education funding constant over the next two years.

New System in Place: How to Get Updates From Hays Rec

Hays Rec Logo

Hays Recreation Commission is happy to announce they have a new Text Messaging system!!!  HRC will be using TextCaster (the same system the Hays school district uses).

They were not able to import anyone from the old system, so EVERYONE will need to sign up for the new system.

Please go to https://my.textcaster.com/ServePopup.aspx?id=2212 to set up your HRC TextCaster account and start receiving text messages from the HRC!  You can also find a link on the HRC webpage – www.haysrec.org

The Hays Rec staff thanks everyone for their  patience as they change to the new system. They will continue to send out e-mails via this e-List, posting updates to their webpage, Facebook and the phone at the office.

Disabled Woman Drowns In Whirlpool Bath

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(AP) — Topeka police say a 36-year-old woman with severe physical disabilities drowned in a whirlpool bath at a group home.

Police Sgt. Jay Juhghans says the accident happened Thursday evening at Sunflower Support, a small home for people with severe physical disabilities.

Juhghans says a caregiver turned away momentarily while the woman was in the pool and she slipped into the water for only a short time.

Staff at the home attempted to resuscitate the woman but they and first responders were unable to revive her before she was taken to a Topeka hospital.

National Finalist!

Hays Area Chamber logoThe Hays Area Chamber of Commerce is a finalist  for the national Chamber of the Year Award.

HACC  Executive Director Tammy Wellbrock says the next phase involves an in-depth interview at the National American Chamber of Commerce Executives  conference in July at Oklahoma City.

Hays is a Category 1 finalist.

 

2013 Chamber of the Year finalists are:

 Category 1:

Hays Area Chamber of Commerce (Hays, KS)

Mayfield Graves County Chamber (Mayfield, KY)

Norfolk Area Chamber of Commerce (Norfolk, NE)

 

Category 2:

Glenwood Springs Chamber Resort Association (Glenwood Springs, CO)

Moore County Chamber of Commerce (Southern Pines, NC)

Putnam County Chamber of Commerce (Palatka, FL)

 

Category 3:

Christian County Chamber of Commerce (Hopkinsville, KY)

Conway Area Chamber of Commerce (Conway, AR)

Michigan West Coast Chamber of Commerce (Holland, MI)

 

Category 4:

Cobb Chamber of Commerce (Marietta, GA)

Lancaster Chamber of Commerce & Industry (Lancaster, PA)

Salt Lake Chamber (Salt Lake City, UT)

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Second try at a shield law echoes the first

PolicinskiSecond try at a shield law echoes the first

By Gene Policinski
Inside the First Amendment

An irony of timing twice has put U.S. Army Pfc. Bradley Manning in the headlines at critical moments in gaining congressional approval of a federal shield law that would protect journalists and their confidential sources.

On Capitol Hill, there’s new-found White House support and congressional action behind proposals to for the first time provide legal means in federal courts for journalists to keep secret their confidential sources and unpublished information. President Obama called for passage of federal shield law in the wake of two controversies in May involving Department of Justice moves to seize journalists’ phone record, e-mail and other data.

A long-standing goal of many journalism organizations for years, an earlier version of a shield law gained U.S. House approval in 2009. But it died the next year in the Senate, in large degree because of the then-breaking controversy surrounding Manning and his leaking of hundreds of thousands of secret military reports and diplomatic cables to the online organization Wikileaks.

Just as this latest attempt at the shield law gathers steam, along comes Manning and Wikileaks again. Just a few miles from the Capitol, in a military courtroom at Ft. Meade, Md., Manning faces court-martial proceedings about the Wikileaks disclosure. Prosecutors say classified information from that unprecedented disclosure then went from Wikileaks to Osama Bin Laden and others, endangered American lives and harmed relations with U.S. allies.
The Manning trial raises anew not only the previous specter of the massive Wikileaks disclosures, but the fear that any source protection in federal courts will make it just that much more difficult to find and prosecute those leaking documents that threaten American lives and the nation’s safety.

Such fear – which last time led to the White House withdrawing its support of the shield law – will just add to an already complex issue of defining who is covered by the revived “Free Flow of Information Act” —in effect, answering the root question of “Who is a journalist?

Wikileaks describes itself as “a not-for-profit media organization” that provides “an innovative, secure and anonymous way for sources to leak information to our journalists.” That self-definition could not be further from one favored by some members of Congress, who would see it labeled a terrorist organization.

Currently, two potential definitions are on the table: In the Senate bill, gathering information to distribute it to the public is all that’s required – which might or might not include Wikileaks. In the House version, there is an added condition: Newsgathering must be done “for financial gain or livelihood.” Wikileaks is funded by contributions for its work, but is that the kind of income the bill’s sponsors have in mind? And then there are bloggers and student journalists, many of whom neither work for commercial enterprises or are paid for their work. Would they be included or excluded by the proposed shield laws.

Both House and Senate versions exclude for “agents of a foreign power.” As Washington Post national security write Walter Pincus noted in a recent column, such a definition would exclude journalists working for organizations tied to terrorist groups, but might it also exclude “… the BBC, Agence France-Presse and some Russian government-owned services?”

Some First Amendment advocates see any description of a journalist as a form of government licensing – one of the very conditions that prompted the nation’s founders to provide such strong First Amendment shelter for a free press. And, as Pincus mused in that same column, such a law could be used by any given administration in the future to exclude reporters or media outlets disliked by government officials.

In the end, Congress should keep in mind that while recognizing an ultimate need for national security, the goal should be to keep our fellow citizens as well-informed as possible.

Gene Policinski is senior vice president and executive director of the First Amendment Center. Email him at [email protected]

KHAZ Country Music News: Blake Shelton Sees Big Sales Jump Thanks to Big TV Appearances Last Week

khaz blake shelton 20130212Blake Shelton‘s latest album, Based on a True Story, enjoyed a 69% sales increase, thanks to his NBC Healing in the Heartland tornado relief special on May 29. His May 27 performance of “Boys ‘Round Here” on The Voice also helped album sales reach 42,000 last week, according to Nielsen Soundscan. Those figures put Blake back at #1 on Billboard‘s Country Albums chart and #4 on the overall Billboard 200 chart.

Blake also enjoys his best digital single sales week ever with “Boys ‘Round Here,” moving 147,000 copies for a 36% increase.

Blake’s wife Miranda Lambert shows up on John Fogerty‘s new album, Wrote a Song for Everyone, which sold 51,000 copies last week for a #3 start on the Billboard 200.  Brad Paisley, Keith Urban, Zac Brown Band and Alan Jackson are among the other stars performing new versions of Fogerty’s hits with him on that album.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

 

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Professor and Son Near End of Walk Across Kansas

Hays native Sandra Billinger, an assistant professor at the University of Kansas Medical Center and her son were nearing the end of their cross-Kansas walk to raise funds for stroke research.

This is the route Billinger and her son walked across the state. Click on the photo for a closer look.
This is the route Billinger and her son walked across the state. Click on the photo for a closer look.

Billinger and her 20-year-old son, Michael Thomas, were expected to make it to the medical center campus in Kansas City, Kan., around 4 p.m. Friday after walking 23 days across the state.

Billinger told The Lawrence Journal-World she got the idea for the 570-mile trip from her son as they were trying to find a way to mark the finish of his classes at Johnson County Community College.

Billinger’s lab focuses on the benefits of physical activity for stroke survivors, so she decided the walk was a good way to raise money for equipment to study the benefits of exercise.

RFL Preps Underway

RFL luminary 1 The Hays Middle School track is undergoing transformation this morning for tonight’s 18th annual Ellis County Relay for Life.

The fundraiser is for the American Cancer Society, most of which goes to research.

Members of the Gemini Juniors 4-H Club and other volunteers are filling  white luminary sacks with sand and candles; they’ll be lit at dusk.

More than 2,500 luminaries decorated in honor and memory of those who’ve battled cancer, will line the track, end zones and bleachers.

The Relay starts at 6p.m. tonight and continues until midnight. The public is invited to attend.

Hays Larks Hosting Military Appreciation Night

Members of the Hays Larks and Dodge City A's gather on the field along current and former members of the Armed Forces for Military Appreciation Night.
Members of the Hays Larks and Dodge City A’s gather on the field along current and former members of the Armed Forces for Military Appreciation Night.

All active, reserve, and retired military personnel are specially invited to attend Saturday night’s Hays Larks baseball game for the Larks 5th annual Military Appreciation Night at Larks Park.

The Larks will take on the El Dorado Broncos Saturday, June 8th at 7:00 p.m. at Larks Park at 4th and Oak Street in Hays.

All military personnel will be honored before the game and Military personnel will also be recognized after the 6th inning prior to the singing of “God Bless America”. Military personnel in attendance should check in at the east side of the grandstand by 6:45 PM that evening.

Fans are encouraged to be in the park by 6:50 PM to show appreciation and support for all military personnel during pre-game ceremonies. Those ceremonies will feature recognition of all military personnel in attendance, a Color Guard, and the National Anthem sung live by Jackie Maxwell.

They will also have patriotic music and a red, white, and blue decorated park throughout the evening.  Flags lining the park will be provided courtesy of American Legion Riders Post #173 of Hays, KS.  Free admission to the game will be provided courtesy of the Kiwanis Club of Hays and VFW.

 

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