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FHSU men’s soccer falls to Southern Nazarene

FHSU Athletics

No. 23 Fort Hays State Men’s Soccer dropped a 2-0 conference road matchup to Southern Nazarene on Saturday (Sept. 20). 
 
The loss was the Tigers’ second straight, moving the squad to 2-3-1 (0-2-0 MIAA) for the year.
 
FHSU started hot, firing three shots in the opening 10 minutes, but it was SNU that found the net early on, capitalizing on the first on Javier Caballeros’ two goals in the game.
 
The Tigers continued to push the tempo offensively, finishing the first half with 10 shots, but couldn’t score before the break. 
 
In the second half, Fort Hays State again attacked the goal, firing nine shots in the final 45 minutes of regulation.  SNU, however, put the game out of reach in the 78th minute on Caballeros’ second goal of the day.

Kent Freund played the entire 90 minutes in goal, saving three shots. 

Offensively, Diego Cabral led the team with five shots (three on goal), while Maurizio Costa had four attempts. 
 
FHSU returns home next week for a contest with MIAA rival Lindenwood on Thursday (Sept. 25).  Kickoff is set for 7 p.m., from FHSU Soccer Stadium.
 

Getaway driver nets 5 years in deadly robbery

jail prisonOLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A getaway driver in a deadly northeast Kansas liquor store robbery has been sentenced to five years in prison.

The Kansas City Star reports that 34-year-old Larry Marshall Jr. received the sentence Friday after testifying last month at the Johnson County trial of his cousin, Bruce Ashley Jr. The trial ended with jurors convicting Ashley of first-degree murder and attempted aggravated robbery in killing of 61-year-old Gerry Grovenburg. Ashley is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

Marshall also had initially faced a murder charge but was allowed to plead guilty to lesser charges of conspiracy to commit aggravated robbery and aiding a felon.

Grovenburg had owned Mr. G’s Liquor Store in Shawnee for 35 years when he was killed in a May 2010 robbery attempt.

 

Tigers win appeal, top KC to boost AL Central lead

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Max Scherzer and the Detroit Tigers won their appeal on a wild play, and Joe Nathan escaped a ninth-inning jam to hold off the Kansas City Royals 3-2 Saturday and boost their AL Central lead.

The Tigers increased their edge to 2 1/2 games over the Royals. Kansas City fell into a tie for the second wild-card spot with Seattle, which played later at Houston.

Detroit, seeking its fourth straight division title, has won 13 of 18 against the Royals this year, including eight of nine at Kauffman Stadium.

Scherzer (17-5) outpitched James Shields (14-8). The Royals put two runners on against Nathan, but he retired Nori Aoki and pinch-hitter Raul Ibanez on grounders for his 33th save in 40 tries.

It was 1-all in the sixth when a line drive and a wild throw led to an appeal toss and a pair of umpire discussions that wound up ruling a Royals runner had left third base too soon.

New diaper business provides green alternative for parents

Little Blessing Diaper Service, Neal Ward demonstrates how to fold a cloth diaper.
Little Blessing Diaper Service’s Neal Ward demonstrates how to fold a cloth diaper.

By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

A new business is the first of its kind in Hays to offer an eco-friendly and natural alternative to disposable diapers.

Neal Ward opened the doors to Little Blessings Diaper Service, 225 E. Eighth, last week. The business provides all the supplies for cloth diapering and a weekly laundry service as well.

“There was no alternative to disposable diapers, no green alternative,”  Ward said. “That is what we are trying to do, give Hays an alternative — another choice.”

A choice Ward said is better for the environment and babies.

Ward said, a cloth diaper is 100 percent cotton, with none of chemicals used in disposable diapers, and do not end up in a landfill.

“It takes up to 100 years for a disposable diaper to decompose — that is a long time,” Ward said.

The father of two added, according to the Real Diaper Association, cloth diapers are also proven to cut potty training by up to a year saving parents money and “heartache.”

Ward added cloth diapers are not what some people picture; there are no pins, instead a “diaper wrap” holds the cloth diaper in place. He encouraged anyone who would like to find out more to contact him or his wife, Lisa, at (785) 635-4939 or visit their website HERE.

 

FHSU one of 25 schools selected for ‘hackathon’ competition

FHSU University Relations

Students from Fort Hays State University are among an elite group from across the country that will compete in the Be “U” Hackathon competition for 2014.

The competition, a function of the United Athletes Foundation and supported and sponsored by Microsoft Supplier Diversity, runs from September through November on 25 university campuses, culminating in a finals event in the state of Washington.

FHSU is in good company. Other universities across the United States that were selected to compete include Indiana State University, Notre Dame, Chicago State, Old Dominion, Hampton, Morehouse and Cincinnati.

The Be “U” Hackathon competition is designed to leverage the talents and resources of the emerging minority collegiate community to enable students to create innovative technologies. These diverse collegiate student teams have the opportunity to create innovative solutions with the support of advisers and mentor-coaches comprised of technology industry leaders.

The United Athletes Foundation, using its relationships with colleges and universities, selected the 25 competing universities.

Dimitry Gimon, assistant professor of informatics, is the faculty adviser for the FHSU team. The students are Eric Stumon, an Oakland, Calif., sophomore; Nicholas Hoffman, a Newton special student; Brittani Tran, a Liberal senior; and Joshua Gale, a Phillipsburg senior. Under the rules, Hoffman and Gale are designated as coders; Stumon and Tran are non-coders.

“I am proud to be involved in this great opportunity for our students,” Gimon said. “This competition allows them to put on hi-tech entrepreneurs’ shoes by going through the same thinking process. It is amazing to watch students brainstorming, throwing out brilliant ideas and discussing them. I am looking forward to our team getting into the finals so they can see how their idea becomes real.”

Teams will compete for scholarship prizes and, potentially, for the opportunity to showcase their concepts to industry executives. From the original 25, a dozen teams will be selected to travel to Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Wash., from Nov. 12 through 14 to present their solutions to a panel of UAF, industry and business thought-leader judges. The students will participate in learning and training sessions and the Hackathon competition.

“I see the main outcome for our students is to be part of a global process of making life better through technologies,” Gimon said, “which is extremely important for FHSU students because many of them came to our school from small places in Kansas. The Hackathon is a great opportunity to do it. I am thankful to the UAF and Microsoft for running this event and giving this opportunity to our students.”

The task for the FHSU team now is to develop a concept plan “that they reasonably, and in good faith, believe can be built and, ultimately demonstrated in a working model,” according to the Hackathon rules. The working model can be a mobile app for Windows Mobile or a mobile gaming app for Windows Mobile. It should be a program that provides a useful function for consumers, businesses — either for-profit or non-profit organizations — government, non-government organizations and other stakeholders identified and defined by the team. Their creative concept should “have a chance to have a positive impact on peoples’ lives.”

Judges for the competition will include key members of UAF, Microsoft, the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, the U.S. Black Chamber of Commerce and the Asian/Pacific Islander American Chamber of Commerce & Entrepreneurship.

The 25 competing universities were announced during a webcast Sept. 10 from the Andrew & Walter Young Family YMCA in Atlanta.

About 20 faculty and students, including Dr. Mirta M. Martin, FHSU president, gathered in a classroom at the Center for Networked Learning to participate in the webcast. Speaking about the opportunity the competition represents for FHSU students, Mark Bannister, dean of the College of Business and Entrepreneurship, said, “Microsoft wants to diversify the base from which it can draw employees.”

“This is a forward-thinking, world-ready exercise. FHSU is known for its innovation and exploration, so something like the Hackathon is part of our DNA,” President Martin told the assembled group. “It is a perfect fit for us to be part of this pioneering group of students nationwide who will be participating in this challenge.”

KU pathologist welcomes federal initiative to fight antibiotic resistance

health doctor insuranceBy Bryan Thompson, KPR

WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Obama on Thursday issued an executive order directing the federal government to step up the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

It’s a fight with enormous consequences, according to Rebecca Horvat, who oversees infectious disease testing at the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kan. In that role, Horvat is familiar with bacteria that are impervious to front-line antibiotics.

“Half of them are very antibiotic-resistant,” she said. “You only have a few drugs left to treat them. I see it every day.”

The day is coming when disease-causing bacteria will develop resistance to all current antibiotics, Horvat said.
We’ll go back to the pre-antibiotic age, where mothers will see half their children die from infections. That’s really what used to happen,” she said. “A lot of your parents will die earlier, because as they get older they get sicker, and there’s no antibiotics left. I don’t mean to make it seem scary, but that is where we’re going.”

Horvat doesn’t know how soon that scenario might play out. She said one simple step we all can take is to wash our hands to reduce the spread of bacteria.

In conjunction with Thursday’s executive order, a science advisory council released a report to the president on how to combat antibiotic resistance. Among other steps, it calls for reducing overuse of antibiotics in humans and livestock, increasing incentives to spur development of new antibiotics, and improving the monitoring of the development and spread of drug-resistant bacteria.

In addition to the scientific report and the president’s executive order, the White House released a National Strategy for Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria. It also announced a $20 million prize sponsored by the National Institutes of Health, Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, and the Food and Drug Administration to spur the development of a rapid diagnostic test to allow health care providers to identify highly resistant bacterial infections at the point of patient care.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, antibiotic-resistant infections are associated with 23,000 deaths and 2 million illnesses in the United States each year. The annual impact on the national economy is estimated at $20 billion in excess direct health care costs, and as much as $35 billion in lost productivity from hospitalizations and sick days.

Rebate available for fall planting of preferred trees (VIDEO)

tree tag joni
Pink tags mark trees eligible for the city of Hays Tree Rebate Program

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The Hays Beautification Committee is promoting fall tree planting.

Between now and mid-October is “the best time” for planting trees in the Hays area, according to Jim Strine, an HBC committee member and recently retired Northwest Kansas District Forester.

“We’ve had some summer moisture, and now that the city recently eased the outdoor watering restrictions, this is a perfect opportunity to plant new trees, which need extra water to get them started,” Strine said.

“Of course, the temperatures aren’t as hot as summertime, the soil temperature is a lot better which allows the root system to get established before winter hits, and then the trees are already established before the hot weather hits,” he added.

The city of Hays has a rebate program for homeowners within the city limits who plant a “preferred or acceptable” tree for the local growing conditions.

Strine and other HBC volunteers have affixed neon pink tags on trees eligible for the rebate sold at local businesses. Research trials by K-State Research and Extension have determined which trees will thrive in the hot, windy and dry conditions prevalent in the area.

“There are some rules you have to follow,” said Hays Director of Parks Jeff Boyle.

“You can’t plant a tree where it will interfere with sight lines for drivers, or anywhere the tree would eventually grow tall enough to interfere with a power line.”

Mulching Trees
Ellis County Extension Horticulture Agent Holly Dickman

Details about the tree rebate program are available on the city’s website or in brochures available at Hays City Hall, the Parks Department and local vendors selling trees.

Ellis County Horticulture Extension Agent Holly Dickman will present a fall tree planting program Tuesdayin the Ellis County Meeting Room, 601 Main.

The free program starts at 7 p.m. Pre-registration is due Monday by calling the Ellis County Extension Office at (785) 628-9430.

Related story: Program will offer tips on tree planting.

Brownback caves on wind energy in exchange for Koch money

One of the few issues on which Governor Brownback and I have agreed is the importance of wind energy and the Renewable Portfolio Standard for Kansas. Unfortunately, Sam Brownback has caved on this issue.

After almost a decade of advocating for wind energy, he now says he is in favor of repealing the RPS.

The RPS was approved by the 2009 Kansas Legislature with an overwhelming bipartisan majority. It requires utility companies to show a renewable energy generation capacity of 15 percent by 2016, and at least 20 percent by 2020. The adoption of the RPS is proof that legislators, especially those from western Kansas, support wind energy and thousands of jobs that go with it.

The American Wind Energy Association reported that in 2013, over 19 percent of electricity produced in Kansas was from wind generation. Industry reports also show that Kansas ranks fifth among states for wind energy-related jobs.

So, why would Sam Brownback reverse his position on an issue that greatly benefits our state?  Could it be he has sold out to the Koch brothers who have been pushing for repeal of the RPS?  Does it mean that, in return, the Koch brothers will pour millions of dollars into Brownback’s re-election campaign to help keep his and their power grip on Kansas?

It is my opinion Brownback’s reversal of the RPS is all about following the money. With only a few weeks left in the 2014 campaign, Kansas voters can expect the airwaves to be flooded with Koch propaganda touting Brownback and demonizing his opponent, Paul Davis.
Simply put, repealing the RPS is also about crippling the wind industry in Kansas, eliminating the Koch brothers’ competition in the energy industry.

This means thousands of Kansans and many rural communities will be pawns in Sam Brownback’s power game.

To that, I say: Game over, governor.

State Sen. Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka

Chrysler recalling nearly 189,000 SUVs

ChryslerTOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writer

DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler is recalling nearly 189,000 Jeep Grand Cherokees and Dodge Durangos in the U.S. to fix a fuel pump problem that can cause the SUVs to stall.

The recall covers some 2011 models with 3.6-liter V6 or 5.7-liter V8 engines. Chrysler says a relay can fail, increasing the risk of a crash.

Chrysler traced the problem to a spring that can deform because of heat.

The vehicles also might not start, and the fuel pump could keep working even when the engine is shut off. The company says that as of Aug. 25 it’s not aware of any crashes or injuries from the problem.

Dealers will replace the fuel pump relay for free starting Oct. 24.

 

Hays commission discusses proposed updates to police codes

By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

Hays Assistant Police Chief Brian Dawson presented changes to the Uniform Public Offense Code and Standard Traffic Ordinances to the Hays City Commission at Thursday’s work session. The codes are published by the Kansas League of Municipalities, and the majority of the changes to the UPOC occurred during the 2011 Kansas legislative session, which included the first recodification of the state criminal code since 1969.

“The goal was to reorganize the statutes and to place them in a more user-friendly order and to revise some of the language to add clarity,” Dawson said. “There were also some statutes that were combined in order to reduce the number.”

The changes also reflect some of the new gun ordinances recently passed by the state Legislature. Revisions include the deletion of sections that regulate the carrying and possession of a firearm due to the fact that cities no longer have control over this issue.

City Manager Toby Dougherty said the revisions were simply an annual “housekeeping item.”

The changes will be considered at the next regular session of the Hays City Commission.

Tracing shift from everyday American to jihadis

police lights

NANCY BENAC, Associated Press
DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — A college dropout from Florida.

A nurse’s aide from Denver.

The owner of a pizza-and-wings joint from upstate New York.

Except for their embrace of Islam, there’s no common profile for the 100-plus Americans who have traveled to Syria to join Islamic fighters or are accused of supporting them from the United States.

Some seek adventure and camaraderie. Others feel a call to fight perceived injustice.

But a shared strain of disaffection, a search for meaning, seems to emerge, at times stronger than any motivation tied to religious devotion.

U.S. officials are putting new energy into trying to understand what radicalizes people far removed from the fight, and into trying to prod countries to do a better job of keeping them from joining up.

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