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Social media no longer just free expression ‘toy box’

Gene Policinski is senior vice president of the First Amendment Center
Gene Policinski is senior vice president of the First Amendment Center

Time to take social media out of the freedom of expression “toy box.”

Serious issues and serious work now abound in this relatively young method by which we not only exchange information, but also to rally to causes and hold public officials accountable.

Just a few years ago, scarcely a few percent of Americans turned to Twitter, Facebook and the like for real news and issues. The medium was dismissed as the stuff of gossip, personal notes and largely meaningless personal snapshots.

And ok, fascination with the “selfie” persists today.

But from controversy in Ferguson, Mo., to tragedies in the Middle East to the flap over hacked nude photos of celebrities to serious debate over domestic abuse and pro athletes, social media is driving public discussion and debate that is the essence of First Amendment freedoms.

The passion of public protest (in other words, the freedoms of assembly and petition), was extended and multiplied in Ferguson, Mo., where street demonstrations over the shooting death of Michael Brown instantly reached a world audience — and may well have been eclipsed in impact by virtual protests.

A photo posted on Aug. 13 of more than 200 Howard University students with their hands and arms in the air, accompanied by the Twitter hashtag “#dontshoot,” became an iconic expression online, and prompted hundreds of posts of similar poses — and thousands of comments.

Even as what many saw as a stereotypical and negative photo of Brown was released by authorities — showing his hands making what some claimed was a gang sign — thousands posted online photos at “#iftheygunnedmedown,” showing two images of the same person side-by-side, one playing to a violent image but the other showing innocent scenes, often with family members and young children.

The ISIS thugs chose to use social media to post horrific videos of their brutal slayings of two U.S. journalists and a British aid worker, and they reportedly also make sophisticated use of the online medium to recruit others to their ranks. In effect, these terrorists used “freedom of speech” for vile purposes.

Even what is not on social media gets attention: Using their own free expression rights to determine what content will appear in their sites, social media operations made decisions to remove and prevent reposting of the ISIS murder videos, and took quick action to prevent the spread of purloined nude photos of several celebrities.

All just new aspects of an age-old question for editors and broadcasters: What to do with graphic, disturbing and or vulgar images that are in the news?

The question of “what to show” has dogged editors and others since Civil War photographer Mathew Brady’s photographs of battlefield corpses at Antietam were displayed in New York in 1862. A newspaper photographer smuggled an “ankle camera” into the 1928 execution of Ruth Snyder in Sing Sing’s electric chair — the first known photo of death by electrocution — and kicked off a debate that remains active today over such photos.

The Ferguson protest may well find a historical niche as the moment when virtual protest took the foreground over actual demonstrations, and when the response from online communities proved to have wider impact than what came from those on the scene. And not only did the Howard and “don’t shoot” prove more effective, they have been immediate, reached audiences around the world, and didn’t allow those bent on violence — as one peaceful demonstrator on the streets of Ferguson said — to “hijack our voices.”

In 2007, an internet milestone was reached at Virginia Tech University, where a gunman shot and killed 32 people. In the hours after that tragedy, major news outlets set up so-called Twitter and Facebook desks, and solicited cell phone photos and video from non-journalists — believed to be the first time this was done on a major story by so many news organizations. In that instance, it was freedom of the press that found a new, technological expression.

Taking to the public square or streets to protest carries its own special impact, with a history that dates back to the colonial era. And face-to-face debate still counts, even in presidential elections.

But in a world now so tightly interconnected through social media, free speech, protest and petition may well have the most impact when done online — and even at 140 characters at a time.

Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Washington-based Newseum Institute and senior vice president of the Institute’s First Amendment Center. [email protected]

Local celebs ready to race for Big Brothers Big Sisters

Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ellis County

Big Brothers Big Sisters and RPM Speedway are hosting the eighth annual Race Cars & Superstars event. The race will be at RPM Speedway at the Ellis County Fairgrounds, on Saturday, Sept. 20 at 7 p.m.

bbbs race cars logo

The extravaganza will include local celebrities from Ellis, Rooks, Rush, Russell and Trego counties who will be competing to bring home the beautiful engraved Sterling Silver Winner’s Cup Trophy to keep, provided by Kuhn’s Diamond Jewelers. Each superstar is asked to raise $1,500 and the superstar that raises the most money will get to lead the Superstar Parade preceding the races, be presented with a Sterling Silver Winner’s Cup Trophy, and will be invited back to compete again next year. The race will consist of three heat races with four celebrities in each heat. The winner of Race Cars & Superstars will then be determined in our feature event with the top driver from each of the three heats and the top money raiser competing to see who will take the checkered flag. The traveling Sterling Silver Winner’s Cup Trophy will be presented to the fastest celebrity, and guarantees the winner a chance to defend their title next year. Last year’s winner was Mitch Driscoll; however a previous commitment prevents him from defending his title this year. Look for him to be back next year.

Superstars from Ellis County include: April Basgall (Boom Boom Basgall), Heath Dorzweiler (Coon*ss), Randi Gerstner (Lightning the Queen), Dr. Katrina Hess (Hot Rod Hess), Vaughn McMurtrie (Ditch Digger McMurtrie), Lien Quan (Lien “Q Shorty” Quan), Dr. Brennan Uehling (Bone Crusher Uehling), and Chris Hancock with the Hays Police Department.

Although the goal of each superstar is to raise $1,500, the winner each year has raised much more than that, often with last minute donations in an attempt to secure the win. Last year, Heath Dorzweiler took home the coveted trophy by raising $7,279 for the children in Ellis County. The competition gets fierce as the event draws near with last minute emails and phone calls to business acquaintances, friends, family, and neighbors. If you would like to help any of the superstars in meeting their challenge, you can send your pledge, designating the superstar of your choice, to Big Brothers Big Sisters at 1301 Pine, Suite B.

Race Cars and Superstars is successful each year because of the many people who care about making a difference in lives of children in their community and step up to sponsor the event. Sponsors include Wayne Kieffer and Hays Chevrolet, who provide beautiful Chevrolet pick-up trucks for the Superstar Parade preceding the evening’s race which will carry the Superstars and Little Brothers and Sisters. Hays Chevrolet, Pizza Hut, and Pepsi are sponsors of the VIP room and are generously providing for our Superstars and their fans.

Year round Platinum Sponsors of Big Brothers Big Sisters include: Eagle Communications, Robert & Patricia Schmidt Foundation, Nex-Tech, Midland Marketing Co-op, & United Way of Ellis County, and the City of Hays. Year round Gold Sponsors include Gone Logo, Lifetime Dental Care ~ Dr. Jeffrey & Jana Lowe, Marty & Roxie Patterson, Pepsi, Pizza Hut, A&A Coors, Jeff & Marla Copper, Mid-Western Pipeworks ~ Gary, Lou Ann, & Brandon Geist, and Centennial Lanes. Print Sponsor of Big Brothers Big Sisters is Northwestern Printers ~ Marvin & Jennifer Rack.

Although the superstars are raising money in exchange for a chance to feel the thrill of driving a real race car; their commitment to improving their community by giving back to children is what really makes each driver a true “Superstar.” It promises to be a fun and exciting evening where anything can happen as they take the track and see who can run the fastest. We invite you all to come and cheer on our Ellis County Superstars at RPM Speedway on Saturday evening, Sept. 20th. See you at the races.

Sheriff: Salina jail overcrowding getting worse

Screen Shot 2014-09-18 at 8.48.52 AMSALINA, Kan. (AP) — Saline County Sheriff Glen Kochanowski says the population of the county jail is the highest it’s ever been.

The sheriff said the jail held 280 inmates Wednesday. The jail was built for 192 inmates. Another 67 inmates are being housed outside of Saline County.

The sheriff cited changes in state laws that send people to county jails rather than state prisons and an insufficient number of judges in Saline County District Court as causes for the overcrowding. The jail also houses inmates waiting for beds in the state system, or those waiting for mental evaluations at Larned State Hospital.

The Salina Journal reports that county residents will vote in November on a five-tenths percent sales tax for a new jail with 344 beds and a justice complex.

Panel starts work on passenger train plan

PUEBLO, Colo. (AP) — A commission created by the Colorado Legislature has begun looking into funding to upgrade the route of Amtrak’s Southwest Chief and keep the passenger train running through the southeast corner of the state.

The Pueblo Chieftain reports the commission met Wednesday to gather information for a funding request to lawmakers.

The commission is also examining what it would take to alter the train’s route and add a stop in Pueblo. The train currently stops in Lamar, La Junta and Trinidad, Colorado.

Last week, federal officials announced a $12.5 million grant for the most urgently needed repairs on the route, in western Kansas and eastern Colorado. Upgrades are also needed elsewhere in Colorado and in New Mexico.

Amtrak says repairs are needed so trains can maintain 60- to 70-mph speeds.

POLL: Should Senate candidate be allowed to withdraw?

The Kansas Supreme Court is considering whether to allow Democratic challenger Chad Taylor to have his name taken off the ballot for the Nov. 4 general election. The move, being contested by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, would leave incumbent Republican Sen. Pat Roberts facing Independent challenger Greg Orman and Libertarian Randall Batson.

Let us know what you think.

[polldaddy poll=8314261]

Have a suggestion for a Hays Post poll? Email it to us!

Kansas falls to fifth in annual highway rankings

Reason Foundation

LOS ANGELES — Kansas ranks fifth in the nation in overall highway performance and cost-effectiveness in the latest Annual Highway Report by Reason Foundation. This is a slight decline from 2011 when Kansas ranked third and from 2009 when the state ranked second.

Kansas’s highways rank 33rd in fatality rate, 15th in the percentage of deficient bridges, first in rural interstate pavement condition, 11th in urban interstate pavement condition and third in urban Interstate congestion.

On spending, Kansas ranks 27th in total disbursements per mile and 17th in administrative disbursements per mile.

Kansas’s state-controlled highway mileage makes it the 27th largest system.

For more, click HERE.

Staff at Kansas universities get pay raise

board of regentsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Staff at five of six Kansas universities who voted to leave the civil service have received their first raises in several years.

The classified staff chose to leave the civil service last year because of frustration with stagnant pay. The vote removed the staff from control of the Legislature and allows the universities to determine their pay.

The workers include custodial and maintenance workers and some administrative and supervisory jobs that receive hourly wages.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports staff at the University of Kansas left civil service years ago.

Ali Levine, chairwoman of the University Support Staff Council, told the Board of Regents Wednesday that most staff saw pay raises on July 1. Levine, who works at Wichita State, says staff there received a 3 percent raise.

 

SHPTV Family Fun Day will feature favorite PBS characters

smoky hills public SHPTV

BUNKER HILL – PBS Kids characters Daniel Tiger, Super Why and Buddy are heading to Hays for Smoky Hills Public Television’s Family Fun Day on Saturday.

“Family Fun Day is a great way for us to provide family entertainment while raising funds for Smoky Hills Public Television,” said General Manager Michael Quade.

Children can meet and take pictures with some of their favorite PBS characters. The fun continues with games, Sleepy the Clown, Randy’s Music Jam, food and more.

“As in the past, while the kids are having fun, there is also an educational component,” said Tricia Flax, event coordinator. “The kids will receive books, have an opportunity to do science projects and interact with Sternberg Museum staff and creatures.”

The third annual Family Fun Day will be at the south end of The Mall at Hays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Admission for children and adults is $10 per person. Children under 2 are admitted free.

To get your tickets in advance, go to www.smokyhillstv.org or call (800) 337-4788.

Woman pleads guilty In federal adoption fraud case In Kan.

United States Attorney’s Office

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – A Texas woman pleaded guilty Wednesday to defrauding four families that wanted to adopt children, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said in a news release Wednesday.

Chrystal Marie Rippey, 34, Marshall, Texas, pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud. In her plea, she admitted she devised a scheme in which she pretended to be pregnant. She contacted adoption agencies and individuals who wanted to adopt and said she was willing to give up her unborn children for adoption. She asked adoption agencies and individuals for money for rent, utilities, food and living expenses.

Couple No. 1: A Delaware couple moved Rippey into their home for a month. They took her on a two-week vacation on the beach and paid for her living expenses, new clothes, cell phone and food. She gave them a sonogram that she claimed showed her pregnancy with twins. In fact, she got the image from the Internet. Then she broke off contact with them.

Couple No. 2: A couple from Shawnee, Kan., put more than $22,000 in an escrow account to pay for Rippey’s living expenses. She told them false stories about her troubles with Child Protective Services and a fire that burned down the home of the birth father in order to get the couple to give her more money. Then she broke off contact with them.

Couple 3: Working with an adoption agency in Overland Park, Kan., Rippey contacted another couple that began providing support for her. They were shocked when they went to California to meet her and saw that she didn’t look pregnant.

Couple 4: Another couple ran up expenses for fees to an adoption agency in Texas as well as travel expenses in hopes of adopting twins from Rippey. Rippey claimed she had a son in the hospital and that she had not eaten in days in order to get money from the couple. But the couple refused her request because the adoption agency told them not to give her any money until she completed adoption paperwork.

Sentencing will be set for a later date. Both parties have agreed to recommend a sentence of 33 months followed by three years supervised release.

Grissom commended the Overland Park Police Department, the U.S. Secret Service and Assistant U.S. Attorney Chris Oakley for their work on the case.

DAVE SAYS: Using the mortgage to consolidate

Dear Dave,
I’m 38, single and I have three kids. I make $65,000 a year and have $34,000 in debt. I’m about to get remarried, and my new husband will make about $100,000 a year. Should I take the $34,000 and put it on my mortgage to consolidate it?
Leslie

Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey

Dear Leslie,
Please don’t consolidate this debt. If you guys are about to get married you need to learn, as a couple, to make debt a thing of the past and live on a written, monthly budget. Think about it. Once you’re married, your family will have a great income. You could really push and attack that debt, and have it paid off in no time.

As a new couple, you need to learn to set goals and work on things as a team. Budgeting is a great exercise for any marriage, but it’s an especially good thing for newly married couples to learn to do. A budget isn’t just controlling your money. It’s two people sitting down together and sharing their hopes and dreams for the future. Not just that, it’s the process of making an actual, workable, written plan that will help make these dreams become reality.

Don’t do a debt consolidation, Leslie. Debt consolidation is nothing more than a “con,” because you think you’ve done something about the debt problem. But the truth is the debt is still there, as are the habits that caused it. All you did was move it around.
You can’t borrow your way out of debt, just like you can’t get out of a hole by digging out the bottom!
—Dave

Dave Ramsey is America’s trusted voice on money and business. He has authored five New York Times best-selling books: Financial Peace, More Than Enough, The Total Money Makeover, EntreLeadership and Smart Money Smart Kids. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 8 million listeners each week on more than 500 radio stations. Follow Dave on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

Buddy Bench builds friendships, fights exclusion at Lincoln

The Buddy Bench, Lincoln Elementary School, serves to foster friendships.
The Buddy Bench at Lincoln Elementary School serves to foster friendships and prevent loneliness.

By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

Staff at Lincoln Elementary School are hoping a new addition to their playground will foster friendship and prevent exclusion at recess.

The new equipment is called the  “Buddy Bench” and was installed this month.

“The Buddy Bench is a bench is there to help eliminate loneliness for children who don’t have anyone to play with at recess,” Lincoln Principal Elaine Rohleder explained. “It gives them the opportunity that they can come and sit on the bench, and students know if someone is sitting on the bench, they need to check out if this person wants to play or just talk or talk-and-walk.

“It just gives the opportunity for everyone to be involved in recess.”

Rohleder said the Buddy Bench is working.

“We see kids who will come and sit and a whole group of kids will  just will run over and ask them to play or just sit down and visit with them, so it’s been really neat to see,”  she said.

Rohleder said she hopes the Buddy Bench will help help students develop sympathy and kindness and said the project compliments the school’s anti-bullying rules.

“One of the rules is to include everyone — the kids who are easily left out — and make sure they are included in activities, so we have seen the Buddy Bench help us solve that issue,” she said.

Rohleder said the bench cost $300 and was bought with funds raised from the Lincoln Elementary’s Home and School Association.

She said she got the idea for the bench by reading an article about an elementary school in New York who added a Buddy Bench. Rohleder said Buddy Benches are “spreading like wildfire” across the country.

The Buddy Bench project is already spreading in Hays  — O’Loughlin Elementary recently added a Buddy Bench to their playground, as well.

 

 

FHSU offering a new concentration in health informatics

FHSU University Relations

The Department of Informatics at Fort Hays State University is now offering a new concentration in health informatics on campus and through the university’s Virtual College.

Health informatics is designed to give those already working in the health care industry, or hoping to work in health care, the ability to understand the needs and demands of patient care and information security.

As the health care industry increasingly transitions to Web-based interfaces, electronic storage and retrieval of patient information, and more sophisticated networks for medical information management, the demand for medical professionals with technology training and expertise is growing. In larger markets, technology professionals with training and expertise specific to medical industries, patient care practices and information security have created niche demand that is not being met.

Hospitals, clinics, specialty practices, pharmaceutical and insurance industries are aggressively recruiting this kind of professional with a uniquely mixed background. These new positions now have some of the highest salaries in the IT field.

The concentration requires students to complete the information networking and telecommunications major core (18 credit hours), the health informatics concentration (22 credit hours), the general education program and the required hours of free electives. Students will be encouraged to take the Bachelor of Arts with its language requirement over the Bachelor of Science because a foreign language will aid in their ability to meet the needs of the health care industry.

For more detailed information, contact Kevin Shaffer, associate professor for the Department of Informatics, at (785) 628-4484 or [email protected].

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