Mike Cooper visits with FHSU Professor of Biological Sciences, Greg Farley, about his upcoming “Science Cafe” and other projects he has going at the University.
Month: December 2013
Peterson Farm Bros. Chore -Katy Perry ‘Roar’ parody (VIDEO)
ECTV Forum Becky Peterson
Tiger Talk Basketball Week 2
Kansas man sentenced in death of girlfriend’s baby

(AP) — A 19-year-old Kansas man has been sentenced to nearly 27 years in prison for his role in the death of a 6-month-old boy.
Michael Dechant of Ogden was sentenced Monday for second-degree murder in the shaking death earlier this year of his girlfriend’s son.
Prosecutors say Dechant violently shook Dominick Lubrano on March 15. The baby died three days later.
Dechant’s girlfriend, Sabrina Lubrano, has said she left Dominick briefly with Dechant to run an errand. Lubrano said she returned to find a neighbor trying to revive her baby with CPR.
Hays Post News for 12-09-13
489 BOE Selects Katt

After searching for three months USD 489 has a new Superintendent. At Monday night’s Board of Education Meeting the Board voted to make Interim Superintendent Dean Katt the permanent Superintendent.
In October the group, with assistance from the Kansas Association of School Board began searching from a new Superintendent and Dean Katt was one of the first candidates interviewed. After the interview process and the three month search the KASB and the School Board agreed Katt was the best fit.
Board President Greg Schwartz said this isn’t something that the board entered into lightly, “We’ve heard very positive things from the community, from teaches and staff. And just our work with him, I think we’ve got some good momentum heading forward.”
Schwartz went on to say that he believes Superintendent Katt will provide the District with strong leadership as they take on some tough issues facing the School District.
Katt took over as the Interim Superintendent on September 1st. He is a graduate of Fort Hays State University and spent a portion of his youth in Ellis. After teaching in Deerfield and serving as principal in Holccomb, has has worked as a superintendent in Scott City and Ottawa.
- The board also heard a presentation, from HHS Principal Marty Straub, about the adjustments to the HHS Curriculum Guide for the 2014-15 school year.
- The SMART Goals that were formed during the Board Retreat in November, were approved by the Board
- The Board Also authorized the School Board President to sign the Ratified Hays NEA Master Collective Bargaining Agreement
Museum Unveiling New Exhibit
The Sternberg Museum of Natural History is opening a new exhibit. On Saturday, December 14th, the museum will unveil “Titans of the Ice Age.”
Museum Director Dr. Reese Barrick told Hays Post that this exhibit will feature the skeletons of mammals that lived during the Ice Age alongside some taxidermied current-day mammals. Barrick said comparing them side by side helps people understand the difference in animals then and now.
Dr. Barrick estimates that this exhibit will be up for around one year, as the items on display belong to Sternberg and are not on loan from other organizations.
Museum members will be invited to a special viewing December 14th from 10am – 12pm. The new exhibit will be open to the public after noon. Refreshments will be served at the event for everyone to enjoy.
Monday’s High School Basketball Scores
BOYS’ BASKETBALL
Lincoln College Prep, Mo. 59, KC Wyandotte 51
Amos Morris/George Stephens Classic
Ell-Saline 60, Russell 54, OT
Nickerson 54, Lincoln 27
Baldwin Tournament
Baldwin 67, Chanute 52
Louisburg 65, Burlington 39
Cheney Tournament
Cheney 49, Hutchinson Trinity 29
Clearwater 55, Valley Center 44
Cimarron Tournament
Meade 53, Satanta 28
Circle Tournament
Mulvane 102, Wichita Defenders 93
Eudora Tournament
Bonner Springs 73, Eudora 67
KC Harmon 53, Harrisonville, Mo. 47
Paola 69, KC Bishop Ward 38
Larned Tournament
Macksville 73, Hoisington 58
St. John 76, Ellinwood 23
Marion Tournament
Eureka 72, Remington 29
Osawatomie Tournament
Spring Hill 69, Metro Academy 63
Oxford Tournament
Douglass 68, Bluestem 33
Trego Purple and Gold Tournament
LaCrosse 51, Ness City 45
Victoria 49, Northern Valley 19
Yates Center Tournament
Southern Coffey 68, Yates Center 42
GIRLS’ BASKETBALL
BV North 62, SM East 49
Ell-Saline 45, Russell 35
Olathe East 51, Notre Dame de Sion 40
SM South 49, SM West 42
Baldwin Tournament
Baldwin 55, Chanute 47
Louisburg 86, Burlington 84, OT
Cheney Tournament
Hutchinson Trinity 48, Cheney 41
Valley Center 52, Clearwater 41
Cimarron Tournament
Bucklin 55, Satanta 32
Cimarron 80, South Gray 36
Circle Tournament
Mulvane 59, Wichita Defenders 44
Goessel Tournament
Canton-Galva 58, Burrton 26
Larned Tournament
Ellinwood 41, St. John 38, OT
Marion Tournament
Remington 55, Eureka 22
Osawatomie Tournament
Independence 53, Osage City 13
Spring Hill 55, Metro Academy 50
Oxford Tournament
Douglass 59, Bluestem 18
Paola Tournament
Bonner Springs 45, Eudora 38
KC Piper 40, Highland Park 29
Paola 90, KC Turner 18
St. James Academy 69, KC Bishop Ward 29
Trego Purple and Gold Tournament
Ness City 68, LaCrosse 38
Victoria 47, Northern Valley 28
Yates Center Tournament
Cherryvale 64, Marais des Cygnes Valley 57
Yates Center 38, Southern Coffey 30
Day care owner sold crack from home
(AP) — A Douglas County jury has convicted a 38-year-old woman of distributing crack cocaine out of her home, which was also the site of a Lawrence day care.
A Douglas County jury found Tiffany C. Hubbard guilty last week of two counts of distributing cocaine, two counts of using a cellphone to distribute the drug and one count of drug possession.
Jurors deliberated nearly a full day Friday before returning the verdicts against Hubbard, who operated the Children’s Playpen group day care out of her home.
Investigators discovered drugs at the home during a search Oct. 24, 2012. The next day state officials issued an emergency order to close the day care.
Hubbard is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 31.
More Kansans using “fixed” website to sign up for health plans

It took them the better part of two months trying to get signed up through the federal health insurance marketplace, but Leo Klumpe and Diana Arb finally have health coverage.
“This is one problem we don’t have to worry about anymore,” said Klumpe, 57, who recently retired after working for the state of Kansas for 30 years, the last several at a juvenile correction facility.
The Topeka couple had the option of maintaining Klumpe’s coverage through the state after he retired. But Arb said it would have cost too much.
“Our insurance was going to cost $1,150 (a month) and it was going to leave us $150 to pay bills out of his check,” said Arb, 55, who works part-time at a senior center. “So, we couldn’t afford health insurance.”
But with help from a volunteer trained to help people shop for coverage on the marketplace, Arb and Klumpe learned they qualified for a federal tax credit because the cost of the coverage available to them was deemed unaffordable given their income. The tax credit lowered their monthly premiums to $188.
We can afford that,” said Arb, who recently was diagnosed with Type II diabetes.
Klumpe and Arb were among about 3.7 million Americans who shopped for coverage on the improved HealthCare.gov website from midnight Dec. 1 through noon last Friday and among dozens who took advantage of special counseling and sign-up sessions at the Topeka Shawnee County Public Library.
Arlene Evans lives in Florida but was visiting family in Topeka last week and heard a television news report about the help sessions. She said she didn’t have insurance and wouldn’t be looking for a policy, if the health reform law didn’t require her to have one. She said she came to the library looking for the cheapest coverage she could find.
It turned out that she also qualified for a federal subsidy.
“I found something that is going to cost me little to nothing and provide me with what I need,” she said. “If the government is going to subsidize the insurance companies then I might as well do whatever makes sense for me.”
Kansas is one of 36 states that chose to rely on the federal marketplace website rather than build their own. Many of the state-run sites have worked better, though some also have had their share or problems.
Becky Hinton, a training specialist at the library, has been supervising the sign-up sessions since the federal “marketplace” site was launched Oct. 1.
“Those October sessions were pretty awful,” Hinton said. “The November ones were a little better. Now, I think the system is working pretty well. It is much more reliable.”
Technical problems rendered the enrollment system virtually unusable in the first weeks after its launch by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. But by the end of November, technical teams working nearly around-the-clock had the system working well enough for President Obama to declare it fixed.
Only 371 Kansans were able to use the website to select plans in October, according to HHS. The totals are expected to be much higher for November and so far this month when federal officials release updated numbers in the next few weeks.
Linda Ochs, coordinator of a Shawnee County Health Agency outreach program that supplies volunteer enrollment counselors to groups holding sign-up sessions, also said that the website was working much better now than when it was launched.
“It’s not perfect yet. There are still some glitches,” Ochs said. “But it is improving and I think it’s only going to get better.”
While it is clear the system is working better, it’s not working for everyone. John Adame, a 61-year-old retiree from Topeka, said he has been trying for weeks to sign up for coverage.
“Each time we get to the end, it (the system) doesn’t let us sign up and tells us to try again in 24 hours,” Adame said. “We’ve been doing that day after day and it just keeps telling us, try again, try again.”
Technicians working to fix the site recently added a reset button to help people such as Adame who have started applications but can’t get through the system. The feature allows users to delete applications and start from scratch, which Ochs said was frustrating but often the best thing to do.
“Our navigators like that feature because it allows them to help people who had gotten stuck before and are coming back for help,” said Debbie Berndsen, director of a statewide enrollment assistance program funded by a federal grant.
Big challenges remain
The window-shopping and sign-up features of the enrollment system are clearly working better.
But federal officials acknowledged last week that about 10 percent of the enrollment files that the system sends to insurance companies once a consumer selects a plan contain errors.
Sometimes the system fails to send the file — technically known as an 834 transmission. Other times it sends duplicate files. And sometimes the file it sends simply contains inaccurate information.
Julie Bataille, a spokesperson for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is in charge of the website, said federal teams were consulting with health insurance companies as they work to correct the date and fix the “back-end problems” with the system.
We’re working to reconcile that information so that all consumers who applied are able to successfully access their coverage,” Bataille said during one of her recent daily briefings for reporters across the country.
As designed, the enrollment system was supposed to allow consumers to pay for their new plans online. But that is still not possible for most consumers because of the “back-end problems.”
So, even though insurance companies are contacting consumers to complete transactions, purchasers also are being urged to get in touch with the company they selected and check that the files forwarded through the system contained the correct information.
“Everyone should follow-up just to confirm,” Berndsen said. “They should err on the side of caution.”
Nearly 190,000 uninsured Kansans are expected to purchase private coverage through the marketplace, according to an analysis by the Kansas Health Institute, the parent organization of the KHI News Service.
Because it took nearly two months to fix the enrollment website, groups working with consumers are concerned that many won’t be able to meet a Dec. 23 deadline for purchasing coverage that goes into effect Jan. 1, 2014. Those concerns have led members of Congress — both supporters and opponents of the reform law — to call for extensions or delays in assessing tax penalties against those who fail to purchase coverage.–By Jim McLean,
KHI News Service
Kansas board to consider new student testing
(AP) — Members of the Kansas State Board of Education are considering approval of a recommendation for new tests that will determine student proficiency in math and English.
The board will act Tuesday afternoon on a proposal made during the November board meeting that Kansas use student testing from the Smarter Balanced consortium. The new tests are aligned to the Common Core standards that Kansas and more than 40 other states have adopted in recent years.
The tests will be administered to students in third through eighth grade. Districts will have testing options available to test high school students and how well they are prepared for some level of post-secondary education or to enter the workforce.
Currently Kansas uses testing provided through a center at the University of Kansas.
Kansas man pleads in fatal fire

A Manhattan, Kan., man has pleaded guilty to being an accessory after the fact in an arson that killed a Kansas State University researcher, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said today.
Gavin Taylor Hairgrove, 30, Manhattan, Kan., pleaded guilty Monday to one count of accessory after the fact in the Feb. 6, 2013, arson at the Lee Crest Apartments in Manhattan. Vansanta Pallem, who lived in the apartments, died as a result of inhaling gases from the fire.
In his plea, Hairgrove admitted that on Feb. 6, 2013, he was present when co-defendants Frank Joseph Hanson,Dennis James Denzien and Patrick Martin Scahill talked about what to do to keep the Riley County Police Department from searching an apartment where Scahill and Denzien lived. They were afraid that during a search police would find evidence that Denzien and Hanson had robbed Dara’s Fast Lane store in Manhattan on Feb. 5, 2013, and that the gun used in the robbery was owned by Scahill. They were also concerned that police would find narcotics in the apartment. The group talked about creating a diversion that would give Scahill time to re-enter the residence and remove the incriminating evidence.
Later that day, Scahill and co-defendant Virginia Griese drove to the Lee Crest Apartments in Manhattan, where Scahill poured gasoline in a hallway of the apartments and started a fire in an effort to create a diversion. Vasanta Pallem was killed in the fire.
After setting the fire, Scahill and Griese made their way back to Griese’s apartment where Scahill cleaned up and removed his clothing because it smelled like gasoline. Hairgrove assisted Scahill in disposing of Scahill’s shoes, which reeked of gasoline. Hairgrove also provided Scahill with another pair of shoes to wear.
Sentencing is set for Feb. 24, 2014. He faces a maximum penalty of 15 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.
Grissom commended all the investigators and law enforcement agencies that worked on the case, including the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Riley County Attorney’s Office, the Riley County Police Department, the Manhattan Fire Department, the Kansas State Fire Marshal’s Office, the Kansas Bureau of Investigations and the Pottawatomie County Sheriff?s Office, as well as Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared Maag, Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Barry Wilkerson and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Barry Disney, who are prosecuting.


