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NASA renames building for astronaut Neil Armstrong

MALCOLM RITTER, AP Science Writer

 

NASA's Orion spacecraft crew module has been stacked on the service module inside the Operations and Checkout Building at Kennedy Space Center -- renamed on July 21, 2014 as the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building in honor of the legendary astronaut and first man to set foot on the moon, Neil Armstrong-NASA photo
NASA’s Orion spacecraft crew module has been stacked on the service module inside the Operations and Checkout Building at Kennedy Space Center — renamed on July 21, 2014 as the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building in honor of the legendary astronaut and first man to set foot on the moon, Neil Armstrong-NASA photo

NASA has honored one of its most famous astronauts by renaming a key building at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

It now bears the name of Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon when the Apollo 11 mission landed there 45 years ago.

Armstrong, who died in 2012, was remembered at a ceremony Monday as not only an astronaut, but also as an aerospace engineer, a test pilot and university professor. Michael Collins, who flew with him on Apollo 11, said he had a powerful combination of curiosity and intelligence, along with an intuitive grasp of flight machinery and its complexity.

Buzz Aldrin, another Apollo 11 crew member, and backup mission commander Jim Lovell also spoke at the ceremony, as did Armstrong’s sons Rick and Mark.

 

Blood drive also supports Ellis High School

image001ELLIS–People donating blood during the American Red Cross blood drive in Ellis Tuesday, July 22, will be helping in another way.

The blood drive will also support the Ellis High School Scholarship Drive.

Walk-in donors are welcome at the Ellis Knights of Columbus Hall 1 p.m.-6 p.m., or can call 1-800-RED-CROSS to make an appointment.

Every pint collected goes toward the EHS 2014-15 school year scholarship.

 

 

 

Nearly 900 Ellis Co. concealed carry applications

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt
Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt

TOPEKA – The attorney general’s office received more than 14,000 applications for concealed carry licenses in the recently ended 2014 fiscal year, Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said in a news release Monday.

There were 887 concealed carry applications in Ellis County from 2006 to 2014.

Click here for a list of applications by county.

Between July 1, 2013, and June 30, 2014, the Concealed Carry Licensing Unit received 14,205 applications. This was the second-highest year on record, following the 25,316 applications received during the 2013 fiscal year. Since the licensing program first began in 2006, the office has received more than 90,000 applications.

“The concealed carry program continues to be popular for Kansas citizens interested in becoming trained and licensed to protect themselves and their families,” Schmidt said. “Our office will continue to administer this program in an efficient manner as the Legislature intended.”

applications-received-by-fiscal-year

Since taking office in 2011, Schmidt has expanded the number of states that recognize Kansas concealed carry permits from 24 to 36. A law passed last year by the Kansas Legislature, recommended by Attorney General Schmidt, allows all valid out-of-state permits to be recognized in Kansas when the non-resident permit holder is traveling temporarily in Kansas.

Click here for a list of licenses issued by county.

Currently, more than 83,000 Kansans have active concealed carry permits. More information on the concealed carry licensing program is available on the attorney general’s website at www.ag.ks.gov.

Primary foes of Kansas governors most often fail

Gov. Brownback and Jennifer Winn
Gov. Brownback and Jennifer Winn

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — History has not been kind to candidates who’ve challenged Kansas governors in party primaries.

Only two challengers have unseated governors in the August elections since the state started them in 1910. And both of them were Republicans who went on to lose in the November general election.

This year, Gov. Sam Brownback faces Jennifer Winn in the Aug. 5 Republican primary. She’s the owner of a Wichita-area property management company.

The first governor to lose a primary was Republican Clyde Reed Sr. in 1930, and the second was Republican Fred Hall in 1956.

Two Republican governors, Mike Hayden in 1990, and Bill Graves in 1998, also survived vigorous primary challenges as they sought re-election.

Hayden lost in the November general election, while Graves won easily.

Hays Heat 12&U team takes title in Dodge City

Front, from left: Brooklyn Staab, Madelyn Waddell, Tasiah Nunnery, Julia Werth, Emily Schulte and Kallynn Petz. Middle, from left, Macee Altman, Lexi Gottschalk, Jaysa Wichers, Hannah Black and Kaitlyn Brown. Back, from left, Joshua Waddell, Ryan Gottschalk, Randy Gottschalk and Les Brown.
Front, from left: Brooklyn Staab, Madelyn Waddell, Tasiah Nunnery, Julia Werth, Emily Schulte and Kallynn Petz. Middle, from left, Macee Altman, Lexi Gottschalk, Jaysa Wichers, Hannah Black and Kaitlyn Brown. Back, from left, Joshua Waddell, Ryan Gottschalk, Randy Gottschalk and Les Brown.

 

Submitted

The Hays Heat 12 and Under fast-pitch softball team’s post-season success continued at the 5 State Border Showdown Series in Dodge City. The tournament ran Friday though Sunday.

The Heat went 6-0 on the weekend, including an 11-1 victory over the Oklahoma Lady Travelers (Laverne, Okla.) in the championship finals. The other wins came against teams representing Colorado, Texas and Oklahoma.

They will now take their 11-game winning streak and 21-3 overall record into their final event of the season at the Heartland VIP World Series in Kansas City, Mo., July 24 to 27.

Invasive weed increasingly taking hold in Kansas

K-State Research and Extension

MANHATTAN – Judging by the number of phone calls he receives, Dallas Peterson is very popular this time of year.

The typical topic is weeds – something Peterson, a Kansas State University agronomist, knows well.

Palmer amaranth
Palmer amaranth

Spurred by late spring and early summer rainfall, farmers’ row crops across much of the state are thriving. And so are the weeds they’re trying to control, including Palmer amaranth, an aggressive and invasive weed that used to be controlled by the popular herbicide glyphosate. Increasingly, however, Palmer amaranth is resisting glyphosate.

“We have had numerous calls about poor control of Palmer amaranth with glyphosate this year,” said Peterson, who is a weed specialist with K-State Research and Extension. “Glyphosate-resistant Palmer amaranth was first confirmed in Kansas three years ago but seems to be exploding across central Kansas this year. Poor control doesn’t mean you have resistance, but if the herbicide treatment provides good control of some plants and not others, that is an indication you may have resistance.”

The weed, also known as Palmer pigweed, is a warm season summer annual weed that generally starts to emerge in May as soil temperatures warm and continues to germinate into summer, especially following rainfall events, Peterson said. It grows rapidly with hot conditions, maybe as much as 1 to 2 inches per day. It is competitive with crops and is a prolific seed producer, up to several hundred thousand per plant.

The hardy weed has been a serious problem in Kansas for many years and had previously developed populations resistant to atrazine and the ALS (acetolactate synthase) inhibiting herbicides. With the introduction of Roundup Ready crops in the late 1990s, glyphosate helped to solve some of those problems initially, but glyphosate resistance has now become a problem because of the heavy reliance on it for weed control.

Glyphosate resistant Palmer amaranth first showed up in the southeast United States and has had a dramatic impact on farmers’ production systems and weed control costs there.

“Producers need to use an integrated approach to weed control that utilizes a variety of cultural practices and herbicide modes of action to help control weeds and minimize herbicide resistance,” Peterson said. “The use of effective pre-emergence residual herbicides is probably going to be very important to help manage Palmer amaranth in the future.

“If a producer notices just a few scattered Palmer amaranth that have escaped a glyphosate treatment, it may even be worth hand removing those from fields to prevent seed production. If not, the resistant biotypes will increase and get spread across the field and to other fields by the combine.”

“If poor control was achieved with glyphosate, it is probably best to assume that it is resistant and plan accordingly, both this year and in the future,” he said.

Five injured after hot air balloon hits power lines (VIDEO)

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CLINTON, Mass. (AP) — A hot air balloon crashed into power lines in a Massachusetts neighborhood, injuring five people on board.

Click HERE for the video. (Caution: Extreme language).

The Federal Aviation Administration tells Boston’s WBZ-TV that the balloon was attempting to land in the residential area in Clinton, Massachusetts when it hit the power lines around 7:40 p.m. Saturday. Five people on board were burned.

Witnesses tell the TV station there was a huge explosion when the balloon hit the power lines. One witness, Bob King, tells the station he was surprised the balloon riders survived. He says he thought “they were gone.”

The FAA says it will investigate the crash.

WaKeeney City Council working on 2015 budget

wakeeney city logoWAKEENEY — The city of WaKeeney is working on its 2015 budget. The city council conducted a lengthy review of the 2015 draft city budget during its July 1 meeting.

The complete meeting minutes follow.

RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE GOVERNING BODY 1 JULY 2014

The Governing Body of the City of WaKeeney, Kansas met in a regular session at City Hall 408 Russell Ave at 7:00 PM with the Mayor presiding and the following members present:

Mayor Kenneth Roy and Council Members Mary Jo Clevenger, Irene Dirks, Troy Leiker, Lynelle Shubert, and Allen Weigel

BEING ABSENT:  None

The minutes of the previous meeting were approved as written, printed and distributed.

GUESTS:  Charlie Knoll and Janelle Miller.

CITY ADMINISTRATOR:  Hardy Howard discussed with the Governing Body an annexation agreement for city water service for Bosselman Energy.  The draft agreement will be forwarded to the city attorney for amendment and review prior to approval by the City Council.

The City Administrator discussed recent repairs to a 1993 IHC dump truck.

The 2015 draft city budget was reviewed at length by the Governing Body.

At this time an ordinance making appropriation for the payment of claims for the month of June 2014 was read, whereupon, Lynelle Shubert motioned to approve claims in the amount of $190,501.39 Irene Dirks seconded.  Motion carried.  Warrants #10084, #10100, #10143, and #10155 were reviewed prior to approval.

MAYOR:  Kenneth Roy discussed with the City Council water usage by the WaKeeney Mini Speedway and alley drainage of in Block 6, Original City.

No further business appearing, the meeting was adjourned.

 

Dirt bikes bring a new type of horsepower to rodeo

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Cowboy Kenny and the Steel Rodeo Tour will entertain during all three nights of Kansas Biggest Rodeo in Phillipsburg.

 

PHILLIPSBURG – A horsepower of another kind will roar into the Phillipsburg rodeo arena July 31 to Aug. 2.

Meet Cowboy Kenny and his Steel Rodeo Tour. Kenny Bartram rides into the arena on a dirt bike and loves to thrill crowds with his freestyle motocross.

Kenny and his fellow dirt bike riders will do tricks, ranging from the can-can to the kiss of death to the cliffhanger and the dead body. They love entertaining at rodeos, and will ride their dirt bikes following each night of Kansas’ Biggest Rodeo.

Kenny, from Stillwater, Okla., grew up around horses and horse shows and listens only to country music. He wears a cowboy hat as he rides, and that sets him apart from the other dirt bike riders.

“I grew up with nothing but country (music),” he said. “Most of freestyle is not country. Between being from Oklahoma and the music, the cowboy hat stuck.”

Kenny took his freestyle motocross act to rodeo in 2004 and formed his own company, Steel Rodeo Tour, in 2010. He’s worked the PBR Finals five times, and now does rodeos only.

He loves the rodeo fans.

“It doesn’t seem to matter what rodeo we go to, or where we are, everybody is so genuine, down to earth, and appreciates what we do,” he said. “In the rodeo world, when I jump the ramp, everybody’s blown away. And to do tricks off it, it’s like they’ve never seen it before.”

In Phillipsburg, he’ll bring a trick that is only done by a few people in the world: doing a backflip on an ATV.

Riding dirt bikes and doing freestyle is crazy to normal folks, but to Kenny, it’s not as crazy as riding bulls. He draws the comparison: “If you told me, in eight seconds, I was going to crash, even if I landed the trick, and then my bike would get up and chase me down, like a bull, that’s the difference between bull riding and dirt bikes. I can pull on the clutch and stop.”

See Cowboy Kenny and the Steel Rodeo tour each night of Kansas’ Biggest Rodeo in Phillipsburg July 31-August 1-2. Performances begin at 8 pm each night. Tickets are $15 for reserved adult seating and $11 for reserved child seating, and general admission tickets are $13 for adults and $10 for children. To purchase tickets, call Heritage Insurance at (785) 543-2448. For more information, visit the rodeo’s website at KansasBiggestRodeo.com or, on Facebook, search for “ksbiggestrodeo.”

Robert Lee ‘Bob’ Dreher

Robert Dreher

Robert Lee “Bob” Dreher, 63, Hays, died Thursday, July 17, 2014 at his home.

He was born March 9, 1951 in Hays, Kansas the son of Wendelin and Sophia (Dreiling) Dreher.  On June 19, 1971 he married Lois A. Weber in Hays.  He worked for Frito Lay in Hays for many years, retiring in 2012.  He was the owner of Dreher’s Pools and Spas in Hays.  He graduated from Hays High School in 1971, was a member of St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, the Sons of the VFW, and was a Troop Master of Boy Scout Troop #113 in Hays for many years.  He loved his grandchildren and enjoyed spending time with them, enjoyed parades, his work and his customers, camping, and his dogs.

Survivors include his wife Lois, of the home in Hays, two sons, Ryan Dreher and wife Shelly and Rick Dreher and wife Tonya, all of Hays, a daughter Renee Medina and husband Frank, Jr. of Hays, two brothers Don Dreher and wife Judy and Ron Dreher and wife Kathy, all of Hays, ten grandchildren, Talisha, Deavon, Shelby, Michaela, Parker, Mason, Presley, Chloe, Olivia, and Trey.

Funeral services will be at 10:00 am on Monday, July 21, 2014 at the St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, Hays.  Burial will be in the St. Joseph Cemetery.  Visitation will be from 5:00 until 8:00 pm on Sunday and from 9:00 am until 9:45 on Monday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine.  A parish vigil service will be at 6:30 pm on Sunday at the funeral home.  Memorials are suggested to the Chloe Medina Medical Fund at Sunflower Bank, in care of the funeral home.  Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com

Jenkins holds big fundraising lead in Kansas 2nd

Rep. JenkinsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican congresswoman Lynn Jenkins has maintained her big fundraising lead over Democratic challenger Margie Wakefield in the 2nd District of eastern Kansas.

Finance reports filed last week by their campaigns show Jenkins ended June with nearly $2 million in cash on hand for her campaign. Wakefield had less than $236,000.

Jenkins also raised almost three times as much in cash contributions from April through June, $382,000 compared with $135,000 for Wakefield.

The biggest advantage for Jenkins was with political action committees. She raised nearly $255,000 from PACs, compared with less than $20,000 for Wakefield.

Jenkins is seeking her fourth two-year term. Wakefield is a Lawrence attorney.

Jenkins faces Joshua Joel Tucker, of Pittsburg, in the Aug. 5 GOP primary, but he raised only about $6,800 during the last quarter.

In Kansas, it’s still all about the budget

Don’t look for it on any of the palm cards that you find wedged into your screen door, but when all the campaigning and voting is over, whoever makes it to the Kansas House next session is going to be faced with ugly choices about cutting spending or raising taxes.

martin hawver line art

Yes, whoever winds up being governor, it still very seriously just comes down to balancing the state budget. That’s Job No. 1, and while there are still Renewable Power Standards and guns and abortion and education, it is still all about the budget.

Kansas had $434.6 million in the bank when last fiscal year ended, yet most of that balance is going to be eaten up this year. Whether that balance gets to zero next June or before is still a guessing game. But the state is going to need new tax revenues or it’s going to have to cut spending on virtually everything it spends money on ranging from education to social services to just keeping the agencies running.

So far, likely Democratic gubernatorial candidate Paul Davis is saying that the next couple years of scheduled state income tax reductions need to be halted. No, that’s not increasing taxes, it’s just not doing the cuts that are on schedule and which nobody has filled out their tax forms to claim yet.

Gov. Sam Brownback is quiet on what to do, if anything. Why talk about anything that is—what’s the word?—unpleasant?—until after the election. Until the budget busts, or he is officially notified of a projected ending balance of less than $100 million, nothing absolutely, positively needs to be done. He’s on board with that.

But, whoever gets to be governor, it’s going to take votes in the Senate and the House to cut spending or raise taxes or find some way for the state to hold its fiscal breath.

Oh, and the Kansas Supreme Court, which has a school finance lawsuit to deal with, has only dealt with the cheap ($130 million) part—equalizing state aid for schools—not the big issue of deciding whether the state is spending enough on schools to produce students who will be smart enough to spur the Kansas economy and support themselves.

That’s the mess that the new Legislature, and those brand new House members who make it to the Statehouse in January, are going to have to deal with.

Once they’re in Topeka, and their new business cards and stationery have been printed, it gets ugly. That talk on your doorstep about efficiency and small government gets put to the test.

It sorta makes that “I’ll represent your values” stuff a little shaky, unless you hand the candidate back a list of state taxes that could take a bit of an increase. Or maybe some state services that you think you can do without…and that means absolutely do without, not just delegate to local units of government to undertake at the cost of higher property taxes or fees.

Now, if your primary interest in state government is naming a piece of highway after a notable local official or fighting the federal government over anything ranging from gun laws to the fate of the Lesser Prairie Chicken, it shouldn’t be too tough to make a choice for your elected representative.

But if you intend to live in Kansas for the next couple years, it probably ought to be fiscal issues you want answers—probably detailed answers—to, and whether to provide the level of services that you want means taxes are in play. Are you one of those 190,000 Kansans who aren’t paying state income tax anymore? Feel comfortable with that? Then what can you or your neighbors do without?

Or, are you seeing the state do things that it just doesn’t need to do? Does that overpass or that bridge look good enough for now? Figure that kids made their way to school before there were those yellow buses?

There’s an easy way to vote, and one a little harder. This might be the year for that …

Syndicated by Hawver News Co. of Topeka, Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report. To learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit www.hawvernews.com.

Ellis County unemployment up slightly in June

June unemployment 2014

While still well below the state average, the unemployment rate in Ellis County ticked up for the second straight month in June.

The Kansas Department of Labor reported an unemployment rate in Ellis County of 2.6 percent in June, compared to 2.4 percent in May.

Unemployment throughout northwest Kansas remains extremely low, with Rush County 4.0 percent topping the region.

Logan County again posted the state’s lowest jobless rate — 2.0 percent.

The statewide jobless rate in June was 4.9 percent.

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