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Few adults taking advantage of new KanCare dental coverage

By ANDY MARSO
KHI News Service

Staff at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence say they are working to let more adults in KanCare know that their insurance now covers basic dental cleanings. About 6 percent of eligible adults took advantage of new dental coverage offered under KanCare in the first year of the managed care Medicaid program.-photo by Andy Marso
Staff at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence say they are working to let more adults in KanCare know that their insurance now covers basic dental cleanings. About 6 percent of eligible adults took advantage of new dental coverage offered under KanCare in the first year of the managed care Medicaid program.-photo by Andy Marso

TOPEKA — About 6 percent of eligible adults took advantage of new dental coverage offered under KanCare in the first year of the managed care Medicaid program.

The switch to managed care Medicaid administered by three private companies extended basic dental cleanings to more than 130,000 adults age 19 to 64
According to Kansas Department of Health and Environment statistics, about 7,600 adults had a cleaning paid for by one of the managed care companies in 2013.

Representatives of the managed care companies and dental providers offered several possible reasons why the rate of use of the cleanings, which dentists recommend twice a year, was not higher.

Ray Munoz, a coordinator at Douglas County Dental Clinic, said adults on KanCare might not know they now have insurance coverage for the cleanings.

“We do have to tell a lot of people that their coverage will cover certain things,” said Munoz, whose clinic serves low-income and uninsured residents of Douglas County. “It doesn’t seem like they’re aware of that before we tell them.”

The three managed care companies responsible for KanCare administration are Amerigroup, Sunflower State Health Plan (a division of Centene) and United HealthCare.

Denise Malecki, a spokeswoman for Amerigroup, also said she thought lack of awareness of the new coverage was a factor. The company has better rates of use for its children’s dental coverage, she said, but “adult dental services are a new KanCare benefit, so many adult recipients, who have never had access before, may not know how to use the services.”

As new benefits go, she said, the rate of adult dental use so far has been “better than expected,” citing the city of Iola as a region where use has been particularly high.

She said her company is working to make more adults aware of the dental benefits, in both written materials like member handbooks and one-on-one interactions.

“Our case managers and service coordinators conduct proactive outreach to encourage use,” Malecki said. “Also, our call center representatives are trained to provide information about available services and access when members call with questions.”

Need for higher-level care

Photo by Andy Marso A sign at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence outlines benefits to patients.-photo by Andy Marso

A sign at the Douglas County Dental Clinic in Lawrence outlines benefits to patients.-photo by Andy Marso

Kendra Davis, who also works at the Douglas County Dental Clinic, said some KanCare clients who are aware of the new coverage can’t take advantage of it.

Davis said customers who have been without regular checkups for extended periods of time often need higher-level dental care like periodontal maintenance, scaling or debridement – services that are not covered – before they can receive a basic cleaning.
Consequently, the clinic can’t order the covered services until a customer pays out of pocket to get caught up on years of higher-level dental care.

Malecki confirmed that some Amerigroup clients go to clinics for their cleaning only to “leave knowing that they need advance dental work and are unsure if they can afford it.”

“We want members to at least start with accessing basic screenings, so they know where they stand with their oral health and how it can impact their physical health,” Malecki said. “From there, we may be able to assist on a case-by-case basis so they can access advance services, especially when special circumstances exist or when there is medical necessity to avoid more serious health setbacks.”

Malecki provided three examples. In two cases Amerigroup helped clients find referrals so they could get their advanced dental work done at lower out-of-pocket costs. A third client received coverage for her fillings because she was undergoing chemotherapy that made it imperative that her teeth not be allowed to decay to the point of extraction.

“Extractions are a covered benefit, but fillings are not,” Malecki said via email. “However, in this situation, the chemo and radiation had made the member’s bones so brittle that extracting her teeth would cause her jawbone to crumble, resulting in the need for oral surgery and wires to hold her jaw together. Because of the medical necessity, we were able to help this member get special approvals to cover the cost of fillings, and the result was that more costly and painful oral surgery and services were avoided.”

Kevin Robertson, executive director of the Kansas Dental Association, said his organization would like to see Medicaid cover more services in KanCare. But he said the group’s members are pleased with the addition of basic adult dental coverage and encourage those who received it to take advantage.

Not doing so, he said, will end up costing more in the long run.

“If people take care of their teeth, brush regularly and seek preventative treatment from a dentist, dental services don’t have to cost that much,” Robertson said. “When things get out of control, now suddenly they’ve got cavities that linger and start having other problems.”
Robertson said he’s aware of “some different pockets” of the state where it’s difficult to recruit dentists and other areas where dentists did not join the managed care networks.

A September network report for the three managed care companies stated that 96.6 percent or more of KanCare clients in each of the companies had access to a dental provider. But the dental coverage map attached to the report shows many of the counties in western Kansas have only one provider who accepts Medicaid or none at all.

Amerigroup’s dental network is most robust, with 425 providers at 305 locations. Sunflower State Health Plan is close behind with 413 providers at 300 locations, and United HealthCare has 391 providers at 287 locations.

Cleaning clinics

Miranda Steele, a spokeswoman for Sunflower State Health Plan, said her company is now using Centene’s Dental Health and Wellness dental benefits manager, which she said will “help reduce the administrative burden for providers and provide the highest quality dental services for our members by being able to more closely coordinate all medical and dental care.”

“DHW began operations with Sunflower on August 1, and we’re looking at interventions such as hosting a series of dental cleaning clinics for adults and coordinating with medical outreach programs to improve access for our adult population,” Steele said.

Steele said Sunflower also had started offering sedation dentistry to adult clients with intellectual and developmental disabilities at some community health providers, like GraceMed in Wichita.

More covered cleanings could give a boost to low-income clinics like GraceMed, Marian Clinic in Topeka and the Douglas County Dental Clinic. Munoz said so far the clinic hasn’t seen a difference with the added benefit.

“As far as the (KanCare) switch helping the bottom line, I would say it has a small amount,” he said. “Everything has been pretty much the same. It hasn’t really been very noticeable.”

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Red Ribbon Week the topic on Eagle Morning Show

Red Ribbon Week 14-15

Holy Family Elementary School teacher Jennie Helget appeared on Monday morning’s Eagle Morning Show to talk with Scott Boomer about Red Ribbon Week activities.

Red Ribbon week runs Oct. 27 to 31.

The school has a different event scheduled each day to mark the anti-drug week, with the them “Our School Is Too Cool For Drugs.”

Click below to hear the interview.

TMP autumn evening prayer is Monday at FHSU

The Thomas More Prep-Marian Cantores Minores and Cantores Primores will present “Autumni Vesperae,” an autumn evening prayer in chant and song at 6:30 p.m. Monday.

The event will be at the Comeau Catholic Campus Center on the campus of Fort Hays State University.

When election ends, the no-spin work begins

martin hawver line art

Less than a week after Election Day, when the neighbors are starting to get a little terse in their questions about when you will take down the campaign signs, the real business of government starts.

That real business is the job of either Republican Gov. Sam Brownback or Democrat challenger Paul Davis to put together a budget for the fiscal year which starts July 1, 2015, and which will probably also involve the current fiscal year’s spending plans.

The Nov. 10 report of the state’s Consensus Revenue Estimating Group will be the official estimate of the revenues coming into the state that whoever is governor then will have to use to craft a budget for the fiscal year which starts July 1, 2015 — and get us out of the current fiscal year with the lights still on.

Because the CREG group of economists and fiscal experts is nonpartisan, it generally looks at just the hard numbers, which politicians then get to characterize however they want. But the CREG number is the basis on which the budget must be written, and the budget has to add up.

All this is quite a way removed from the campaign rhetoric we’ll be hearing this week. Whatever we have been told about school spending or highways or social service programs or nearly anything else during the campaign just fades away, and Kansans live with the programs and spending that the CREG-estimated budget will afford.

A couple numbers are already floating around. In April, CREG—which meets twice a year—figured that state revenues would be $5.96 billion, about 6 percent below last year, but up about $100 million from last November’s estimate. Already, revenues within this fiscal year are down about $20 million from that April estimate. And, that slippage may be accounted for on Nov. 10.

But the real issue may be whether this year’s April estimate of 6 percent slippage is the bottom of the well, or whether there is more significant year-to-year revenue dropping to be done.

If state revenues have hit rock bottom, that’s good news. It’s a base to start from while the state adjusts to massive income tax cuts and sees whether that “discretionary” spending which produces sales tax and liquor tax and all other sorts of specialized taxes tied to discretionary spending will rise. Remember, the theory is that as income taxes drop, businesses and people will spend the money they are saving on income taxes on other things, paying taxes on those purchases.

But we’re at the point in the state budget that if there aren’t some new revenues coming in, things get a little bleak. Programs are reduced, state employment continues to fall, and at some point, the state just doesn’t have enough money barring a tax increase or something similar to do much for Kansans.

That’s when the state starts looking for programs that local units of government—like cities and counties—have to fund, and likely increase property taxes to accomplish.

So, it’s really going to be the CREG estimate that most of us can use as a predictor of whether our property taxes are going up.

Almost a shame that the estimate won’t be made before the election, but then, it would just get portrayed however each candidate wants to spin it. What might be the most important announcement for the next couple years about where our government is headed would become unclear.

For whomever is governor or governor-elect Nov. 10, the spin cycle will be over.

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.

Feds block Kansas plan to reduce school testing

test  exam  TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will not be able to let high school students skip state mathematics and English tests so they can focus on college entrance exams and career-oriented tests.

The U.S. Education Department says Kansas’ proposal would conflict with federal testing requirements that ensure accountability in schools.

Interim Kansas Education Commissioner Brad Neuenswander says the state wanted to let schools choose whether to drop state tests so student could concentrate on such tests as the ACT and job skills.

Kansas students are to take state math and English tests at least once in high school but Neuenswander says some students were testing more than once in high school.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the state now plans to restrict the math and English tests to the 10th grade.

Police: Regretful robber robs gas station, returns cash

EUREKA, Calif. (AP) — Police in Northern California say a man robbed a gas station only to return hours later to give the money back and apologize.

Eureka Police Sgt. Steve Watson said Sunday that 23-year-old Cyle Warren Abbott Jr. told officers he needed cash to leave town for a fresh start, but then realized his mistake.

Watson says Abbott first entered the gas station demanding cash with what the clerk believed was a semi-automatic handgun.

He says the clerk gave Abbott some cash, and Abbott left, also taking two bottles of beer.

Watson says three hours later Abbott returned, giving back most of the cash and saying he was sorry. He says the weapon turned out to be a BB gun, which officers haven’t found.

Abbott was booked into jail on $50,000 bail.

Orman covers $1M in expenses in Kansas Senate race

Roberts and Orman
Roberts and Orman

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A finance report shows independent candidate Greg Orman covered nearly $1 million in expenses from mid-July through September and loaned his campaign U.S. Senate campaign in Kansas another $200,000.

Orman is a wealthy Olathe businessman trying to unseat three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts.

A report filed by Orman’s campaign with the Federal Election Commission and available online Sunday shows Orman covered $963,000 in expenses from mid-July through September, mostly for advertising.

He received $537,000 in contributions and loaned his campaign $200,000 on Sept. 25.

With earlier contributions, he had more than $2 million available during the period. The campaign had $1.9 million in expenses, including those Orman funded himself.

He ended September with about $120,000 in his campaign fund.

A report for Roberts was not available online Sunday.

Settlement reached in Kansas energy case

Screen Shot 2014-10-27 at 7.18.50 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — State officials and Black Hills Energy have reached a settlement in the utility company’s request to raise natural gas rates.

The settlement announced late Friday will raise costs for Black Hills gas customers but by much less than the company requested.

If the settlement is approved by state regulators, it would raise overall rates by about $735,000, which is about $3 a year for the average customer. Black Hills Energy sought a $5.1 million net increase, which would have raised the average bill $4.17 a month.

The Wichita Eagle reports all the parties to the case have signed off on the agreement.

Black Hills, which is based in South Dakota, has about 110,000 customers in Kansas, about a third of those in the Wichita area.

Is the Kan. transportation budget too large?

Don Hineman, R-Dighton
Don Hineman, R-Dighton

The Kansas Department of Transportation recently conducted a series of local consult meetings to receive input from the public on what highway projects should be considered for the future. I attended the meeting in Hays on Oct. 14 to advocate for improvements to Kansas 23 from Hoxie south to Grainfield.

Like many of the north-south highways in western Kansas, K-23 carries an ever-increasing amount of truck traffic. These highways also typically have very narrow shoulders and steep ditches. The problem has been addressed in recent years on other portions of K-23 through a process of “practical improvement” whereby the roadbed is cut down to a lower elevation and wider shoulders are added. But the section from Hoxie to Grainfield has not been addressed. The practical improvement approach will not work here, because this section of highway is quite hilly. A full-blown upgrade will be required, including acquiring more right-of-way and adding adequate shoulders to the existing roadbed.

There is urgency to this project as the road conditions and increased truck traffic have made this a very dangerous section of highway. There have been multiple fatality crashes on this road in recent years. I was pleased that a number of other area residents showed up in Hays to push for improvements on this road, and I am certain that we got the attention of the officials at KDOT. But here’s the thing: The current ten-year highway plan known as T-Works is fully developed and no new projects can be added. The current round of local consult meetings was to help develop priorities for the future “should additional money become available”. The best we can hope for is that the K-23 project gets placed on the list of projects that qualify for preliminary engineering studies. The very earliest that actual construction might take place would be in 2019 or 2020.

In my opinion that is unacceptable. This project is not an isolated situation, and a recent report reveals that rural Kansas highways are significantly less safe than urban Kansas highways. The National Transportation Research Group reports that Kansas rural roads and bridges have high rates of deficiencies and traffic fatalities. The group also found that traffic crashes and fatalities on rural roads in Kansas occur at a significantly higher rate than on other Kansas roads. In 2012, non-interstate rural roads in the state had a higher traffic fatality rate than all other roads in Kansas.

In the past five years the Kansas legislature has transferred $611 million out of KDOT and into the state general fund for other purposes. And this is not a new phenomenon. In the last 20 years, nearly $2 billion has been raided from the “Bank of KDOT.” The Kansas Policy Institute, a conservative “think tank” with ties to the billionaire Koch brothers of Wichita, recently released a suggested five-year budget for the state of Kansas. They propose making the transfers of money from KDOT to the state general fund official and permanent by reducing the amount of sales tax money that goes to KDOT. They assert that the funds that have been transferred in the past are just surplus and can be put to better use elsewhere in the state budget.

Surplus? Really? Those transferred funds don’t feel like to surplus to western Kansans who have to face more dangerous driving conditions than their urban counterparts. They don’t feel like surplus to farmers and agribusiness of western Kansas who must use those roads to move their products to market. And they certainly don’t feel like surplus funds to the family members of those who have lost their lives on unsafe rural highways.

If those funds were truly surplus, then why did bonded indebtedness of KDOT increase $400 million from fiscal year 2011 to fiscal year 2013… the same time period when hundreds of millions were being stolen from KDOT for other budget priorities? Paying for current projects has been pushed off on future taxpayers while rural Kansans are forced to travel on unsafe roads. Such a policy is not conservative and it is not responsible.

Rep. Don Hineman is a Dighton Republican representing the 118th District in the Kansas House.

EXPLORING from Horse Thief: Kansas hunting rises again

Steve Gilliland
Steve Gilliland writes Exploring Kansas Outdoors weekly for Hays Post.

Friday morning, Joyce and I joined dignitaries from the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism and representatives from numerous Kansas tourism related groups at Horse Thief Reservoir in Hodgeman County for the 2014 Kansas Hunting Showcase.

Shining like a jewel in the otherwise empty western Kansas landscape, the 400-acre lake sort of sneaks up on you, suddenly appearing from out of nowhere as you top a hill about 10 miles west of Jetmore.

Horse Thief Reservoir is a recreation and water management project of the Pawnee Watershed Joint District No. 81, which by the way is the largest watershed district in the United States, encompassing more than 1.5 million acres in nine southwest Kansas counties.

Besides pleasure boating and water skiing, Horse Thief has 42 campsites with full hookups and many primitive campsites, plus two cabins and a yurt that can be rented. There are also hiking and bicycling trails and an archery range that’s open 24-7 for the public to use.

The fishing at Horse Thief is coming into its own, with good catches of largemouth bass being reported. Walleye were stocked this past spring and crappie and channel cat numbers are growing steadily with time. The hunting showcase was held in a very nice, large heated/air conditioned multi-purpose building which is available to rent along with the rest of the facilities for church functions, concealed carry classes, etc.

The 2014 Kansas Hunting Showcase promoted the quality of our state’s hunting (and fishing) and highlighted the importance of hunting (and fishing) to the Kansas economy. Here are some astounding figures shared with us by Assistant Secretary for Parks and Tourism, Linda Craghead:

• Hunting brings in over $401 million to the Kansas economy each year.

• Fishing brings in over $211 million.

• Non-resident hunting and fishing license sales bring in $10.7 million each year; while accounting for less than 16 percent of total license numbers, this is 60 percent of the total license revenue.

• Resident hunting and fishing license sales bring in $7.8 million.

• Hunters and anglers coming to Kansas spend on average 32 percent more during their stay than traditional leisure travelers.

We also heard the forecast for this year’s pheasant, quail and waterfowl seasons.

Pheasant: Conditions throughout the spring and summer have reflected a statewide increase in summer brood counts by 70 percent. Remember the past 2 or 3 years pheasant populations have been paltry at best, mainly because of the drought, so numbers are just now rising again to where they had been prior to the drought years.

Quail: Roadside surveys reflect a statewide increase of 50 percent compared to 2013. The drought years affected quail numbers also, but 50 percent is a nice increase.

Ducks: American fall flight estimates show breeding duck populations up 8 percent since standard surveys began in 1955. Kansas is situated smack in the heart of the Central Flyway where breeding ducks surveyed this spring showed numbers up 68 percent above the long-term average.

Geese: While I wasn’t able to find specific percentages or numbers, everything I read placed goose populations as a whole above objective numbers.

Isn’t it amazing how rainfall or the lack thereof affects wildlife? Many parts of the state have gotten good rainfall amounts this year and wildlife in those areas has responded. Our trail cameras are recording many nice young deer this year, pheasant and quail numbers are up dramatically, there is water in most of the waterfowl “honey-holes” again and even though wild turkey populations state wide are just considered “stable,” turkey populations around us are booming; all good reasons to Explore Kansas Outdoors.
And while you’re at it, check out Horse Thief Reservoir in Hodgeman County just west of Jetmore and on the website www.horsethiefres.com.

Steve Gilliland can be contacted by email at [email protected].

HPD activity log, Oct. 24 to 26

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The Hays Police Department conducted 14 traffic stops on Friday, 27 on Saturday, and 10 on Sunday, according to the HPD activity log. The department also received 23 animal calls over the three-day period.

Oct. 24
Driving Under the Influence, 300 block West Seventh, 1:30 a.m.
Fire, 3500 block Canal, 2:24 a.m.
Credit Card Violations, 1300 block Vine, 5:16 a.m.
Credit Card Violations, 3700 block Vine, 5:16 a.m.
Credit Card Violations, 2700 block Hall, 5:18 a.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident, 20th and Allen, 7:57 a.m.
Animal At Large, 3300 block Country Lane, 8:22 a.m.
Obstruction of Legal Process, 100 block West 12th, 4:05 p.m.
Traffic/Driving Complaint, 1000 block East 43rd, 9:39 a.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Private Property, 4300 block Vine, 11:19 a.m.
Theft, 2700 block Hall, 12:23 p.m.
Civil Dispute, 600 block West 13th, Oct. 10
Assist, 1000 block Fort, 2:56 p.m.
Harassment, 800 block Elm, Aug. 1 to Oct. 24
Suspicious Activity, 700 block East Sixth, 2:33 p.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Hit and Run, 4000 block Country Lane, 3 p.m.
Animal At Large, 1500 block Henry, 3:16 p.m.
Found/Lost Property, 2700 block Hall, 5 p.m.
Civil Dispute, 400 block West 14th, 5:54 p.m.
Animal Call, 40th and Hall, 8:26 p.m.
Warrant Service/Failure to Appear, 200 block East 17th, 8:39 p.m.
Mental Health Call, Hays, 9:21 p.m.
Liquor Offense, Seventh and Fort, 11:42 p.m.

Oct. 25
Driving While Suspended/Revoked, 200 block East 14th, 1:21 a.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 400 block West 37th, 3:18 a.m.
Intoxicated Subject, 200 block West Seventh, 3:35 a.m.
Custody Dispute, 2700 block Epworth, 10:03 a.m.
Suspicious Activity, Ninth and Main, 10:22 a.m.
Drug Offenses, 1100 block East 13th, 10:59 a.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 400 block West 24th, 11:07 a.m.
Abandoned Vehicle, 200 block West 35th, 11:28 a.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Private Property, 1500 block Vine, 12:50 p.m.
Disturbance/Fight, 400 block East 16th, 1:18 p.m.
Animal At Large, 14th and Ash, 3:18 p.m.
Domestic Disturbance, 300 block East 14th, 3:38 p.m.
Disturbance/Noise, 400 block East 14th, 5:12 p.m.
Civil Dispute, 200 block West 12th, 6:44 a.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Personal Injury, 500 block West 27th, 8:43 p.m.
Disorderly Conduct, 3600 block Vine, 10:45 p.m.
Miscellaneous Investigation, 1000 block East Eighth, 9:45 p.m.

Oct. 26
Warrant Service/Failure to Appear, 800 block Ash, 12:08 a.m.
Disturbance/Noise, 100 block East Seventh, 12:22 a.m.
Driving While Suspended/Revoked, 200 block West Ninth, 12:58 a.m.
Aggravated Battery, 200 block West 10th, 1:40 a.m.
Disturbance/Fight, 100 block West Seventh, 1:54 a.m.
Disorderly Conduct, 200 block West 10th, 1:57 a.m.
Disorderly Conduct, 200 block West 10th, 2:11 a.m.
Theft, 400 block West Seventh, 4:31 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 400 block West Seventh, 4:53 a.m.
Animal At Large, 1300 block East 18th, 8:41 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 700 block East Eighth, 8:45 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 600 block East Eighth, 9:16 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 600 block East Eighth, 9:24 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 700 block East Eighth, 9:51 a.m.
Theft of Vehicle, 1000 block Reservation, 10:30 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 1000 block Reservation, 10:51 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 1800 block 27th, 9 a.m.
Criminal Damage to Property, 500 block East Eighth, 11:23 a.m.
Animal At Large, 13th and Main, 11:55 a.m.
Welfare Check, 1700 block Volga, 12:35 p.m.
Motor Vehicle Accident/Hit and Run, 2100 block Milner, 9 p.m.
Driving While Suspended/Revoked, 2800 block Hall, 2:14 p.m.
Found/Lost Property, 3400 block Vine, 4:26 p.m.
Mental Health Call, 2500 block Sherman, 8:26 p.m.
Burglary/vehicle, 1000 block Vine, 9:40 p.m.
Animal At Large, 1300 block East 13th, 11:57 p.m.

Hays Symphony Orchestra to feature FHSU woodwind profs in fall concert

By RACHEL RAYNER
FHSU University Relations

The Hays Symphony Orchestra will perform its “Fall Classics” concert under the baton of Conductor Benjamin Cline at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 1, at the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Sheridan Hall on the Fort Hays State University campus. Cline is chair of the Department of Music at FHSU.

The concert opens with Georg Philip Telemann’s “Oboe Concerto in D Minor,” featuring Fort Hays State instructor of oboe Kay Werth. The simple, singing melodies of the oboe contrast with the harmonic complexity Telemann wrote for the rest of the orchestra, which are typical of the baroque period.

Next, FHSU flute instructor Hilary Shepard picks up the pace as soloist in Antonio Vivaldi’s flute concerto “La Notte.” Like most Vivaldi concertos, the piece contains a virtuoso solo line supported by driving sixteenth notes from the strings, creating a bright, energetic atmosphere. Lovers of Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” are sure to enjoy this piece.

The orchestra closes the first half of the concert with the second and third movements of Carl Maria von Weber’s “Concerto No. 2 for Clarinet,” featuring soloist and FHSU clarinetist Dr. Kristin Pisano, associate professor of music and theatre. The concerto explores the rich tone of the clarinet and showcases Pisano’s technical abilities with some of the most difficult passages in clarinet literature.

The second half of the concert is one of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s most beloved and recorded pieces, “Symphony No. 40 in G minor.” The lilting, graceful melodies in the piece are some of his most beautiful work, while the pulsing string accompaniment underlying them provide tension and depth. This symphony will be one of the highlights of the entire 2014-2015 season.

Tickets are $6 for adults; $4 for youths 12 to 18 and for senior citizens; and free for FHSU students with Tiger Card and for children under age 12.

For more information about the Hays Symphony Orchestra’s 101st concert season, visit its Facebook page or call 785-628-4533.

Rachel Rayner is a FHSU senior majoring in music and English writing and minoring in German. She also writes the blog www.experiencingessen.weebly.com.

KHAZ Country Music News: Reba’s Father Passed Away

khaz reba mcentire father mother 20141027COALGATE, Okla. (AP) – The father of country music star Reba McEntire has died in Oklahoma.

A post on the singer’s verified Twitter account Friday says Clark McEntire passed away Thursday night in Coalgate.

The director of Brown’s Funeral Service in nearby Atoka confirmed the death, saying McEntire had been in declining health since suffering a stroke a few years ago. He was 86.

A post on the country star’s Instagram account says her father was “born and bred a cowboy.” It says she’s thankful he’s no longer suffering.

The post includes a photo of her father on horseback, saying: “He always told us kids never to run your horse to the barn. He was just taking his time to go on home.”

Funeral home director Eddie Brown says a service will be held Wednesday.

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

 

 

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