We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Obama presents climate change as hazard to your health

epaJOSH LEDERMAN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is asking Americans to think of climate change as a threat not just to the planet, but also to their health.

Obama traveled on Tuesday to the medical school at Howard University, a historically black college not far from the White House. The surgeon general and the Environmental Protection Agency chief joined him.

Obama announced that Google will donate 10 million hours of advanced computing time to new tools, including risk maps and early warnings for things like wildfires and oil flares using the Google Earth Engine platform. Google’s “Street View” camera cars will start measuring methane emissions and natural gas leaks.

The Obama administration is also expanding access to data that can help predict and minimize health effects from climate change.

Day of Play will be Saturday at Hays Public Library

Hays Public Library

Celebrate International Tabletop Day with fun and friends this Saturday. The Hays Public Library and The Gamers Guild will host International Tabletop Day on Saturday, April 11, at The Gamers Guild, 200 E. Eighth. Participants and gamers are welcome to come and go between 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Screen Shot 2015-04-07 at 8.05.23 AM

This day focuses on tabletop gaming, especially the increasingly popular Eurogames like Settler of Catan. Participants can bring their own favorites to play or play games provided by local gamers including:

• Android: Netrunner
• Pinata
• Lords of Waterdeep
• Settlers of Catan
• Qwirkle
• Forbidden Island
• Wits & Wagers
• Balderdash
• Pit

Tabletop.com describes the daylong celebration as “a way for the world to celebrate tabletop gaming together.” Each year, the worldwide celebration has grown. Last year, the International Tabletop Day in Hays had more than 50 participants.

Light snacks and coffee will be provided. There will also be a door prize drawing for a board game.

For more information about International Tabletop Day visit www.tabletopday.com.

Contact the Young Adult Department at the Hays Public Library at (785) 623-4944 for event information.

Can phone companies do more to block robocalls?

Do Not callANNE FLAHERTY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Communications Commission has been asked to consider whether phone companies could do more to stop the onslaught of “robocalls,” the automated phone calls favored by scammers.

Since the convergence of Internet and phone lines, it’s become cheap and easy to blast out hundreds of thousands of calls in a matter of minutes to see who takes the bait.

The phone companies say they worry that automatic call blocking might run afoul of the law and have asked the FCC to clarify that it doesn’t. They want to be able to offer call blocking services to consumers, but don’t want regulators to create any hard-and-fast rules.

Consumer groups say phone companies are dragging their feet. They say most carriers could block the robocalls.

State Hospital may freeze admissions due to renovations

Screen Shot 2015-04-07 at 4.11.19 PM

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas state hospital for the mentally ill is being forced to reduce its patient population as it prepares for renovations.

The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services announced Tuesday that Osawatomie State Hospital’s occupancy will be reduced to 146 from 167 until its ceilings can be upgraded to be safer.

Until renovations are completed in October, the hospital may freeze admissions when 146 patients are already present.

During the past six months, federal officials have twice threatened to withhold federal funding from the hospital due to poor conditions and overcrowding.

KDADS spokeswoman Gina Meier-Hummel says the renovations will cost $3 million and that most of the affected patients will be moved to assisted living facilities, nursing homes and other community mental health centers.

FHSU women’s soccer announces 2015 signing class

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State women’s soccer coach Craig Shaw announced the signings of nine student-athletes for the 2015 season.  Eight of the nine players will be incoming freshman while one junior college transfer will join the team.  Six signees hail from Colorado, while Kansas, Nebraska and Texas each have one representative.  Position breakdown of the signing class includes one goalkeeper, one outside/center back hybrid, two center backs, two midfielders and three forwards.

FHSU completed its fourth season of women’s soccer in 2014 and compiled a 13-5-2 record, just missing a berth to the NCAA Tournament. The Tigers ended the regular season with an eight-game unbeaten streak and won their MIAA Tournament first round game over Missouri Western at home.
A complete list of the team’s commitments is below…

Jessica Babyak
Freshman, Center Back
Austin, Texas
McNeil High School

Megan Kneefel
Freshman, Goalkeeper
Aurora, Colo.
Smokey Hill High School

Savannah Mclease
Freshman, Forward
Lakewood, Colo.
Jefferson County Open School

Cassi Moosburger
Freshman, Forward
Arvada, Colo.
Arvada West High School

CheyAnn Queener
Junior, Center Back
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Laramie County Community College

Taylor Rodriguez
Freshman, Midfielder
Grand Island, Neb.
Grand Island Senior High School

Jenna Schemmel
Freshman, Forward
Longmont, Colo.
Silver Creek High School

Taryn Schnell
Freshman, Outside Back/Center Back
Littleton, Colo.
Bear Creek High School

Taylor Spencer
Freshman, Midfielder
Winfield, Kan.
Winfield High School

2 plans get high marks in diet review

CHICAGO (AP) — A review of research on commercial diets gives high marks to Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig. Those programs have good evidence of lasting weight loss, but the researchers say many other plans just haven’t been studied enough to draw conclusions.

They pooled results from several studies and found that Weight Watchers dieters lost an average of at least 8 pounds and kept it off for at least 12 months. That compares with about 15 pounds for Jenny Craig.

Most participants remained overweight. Even so, their weight loss was in a range that doctors typically recommend for benefits including lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

The study was published Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Kan. woman arrested for attacking grandson with branch, car

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 68-year-old Wichita woman didn’t take kindly to having her grandson swearing at her, so police say she hit him with a tree branch and tried to run over him with a car.

The Wichita Eagle reports the woman and her grandson’s girlfriend were arrested on Monday after an incident that started as a domestic dispute escalated.

Police say the 27-year-old grandson accused his girlfriend of having an affair with their landlord at an apartment complex, prompting the 19-year-old to start throwing her boyfriend’s belongings out of the apartment.

Police say the man began arguing with his grandmother when he went into the apartment to retrieve his young child.

Police spokesman Lt. James Espinoza says the girlfriend was arrested for punching the man in the face during the argument.

Voter turnout ‘slow-going’ in Ellis County city/school election

By KARI BLURTONvote ellis county
Hays Post

Ellis County Clerk and Election Officer Donna Maskus is hoping voter turnout “goes into high gear” following a “very slow” turnout as of noon Monday.

Maskus said their are 10 polling sites in Ellis County. One polling location in Hays reported just 12 voters. The highest numbers in Hays were reported at two polling stations each reporting 131 voters.

However, Maskus said the Ellis polling site reported a “steady pace” of 278 voters throughout the morning.

All polling locations will close their doors at 7 p.m., but those already inside the building by the deadline are allowed to vote.

Masksus expects all votes will arrive at Ellis County Administration Building, 718 Main, by  8 p.m. and  the unofficial results will be announced tonight.

She said the public is invited to wait there while the votes are tabulated.

“At that point, we will start looking at provisional ballots … people who have moved, changed their name or did not have the correct ID when they voted,” Maskus said, adding the results are only official after they are canvassed April 13.

For more information, contact the  Ellis County Clerk’s office at (785) 628-9410.

The unofficial results will be posted on HaysPost.com when they are available.

 

‘Traveling Kansas’ makes a stop in Oakley

TravelingKansas

BUNKER HILL – Smoky Hills Public Television’s “Traveling Kansas” will highlight Oakley during an airing at 7:30 p.m. April 16.

The episode features the Fick Fossil and History Museum, the Buffalo Bill Cultural Center, and the Kansas State Cornhusking Contest. The annual cornhusking festival, held in October, celebrates the heritage of hand husking and other rural life skills.

The program will premier on April 16 with an encore at 1:30 p.m. April 19.

“Traveling Kansas” is a Smoky Hills Public Television production that highlights Kansas communities, events and natural wonders. Previous episodes can be viewed at smokyhillstv.org.

SHPTV can be seen on Eagle Cable channels 9 and 609 (high-definition).

FHSU men’s golf finishes 8th in rain-shortened Lindenwood Invitational

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State men’s golf finished eighth as a team at the rain-shortened Lindenwood Invitational in St. Charles, Mo. The tournament was held at Missouri Bluffs Golf Club, a par-71 course in St. Charles.

Trey Herman led the way for FHSU by shooting a 4-over par 75 in round one and a 1-under par 70 in the second round to finish at 3-over par overall. His score of 145 tied for 10th. Dylan Wonnacott shot 2-over and 3-over (73 and 74) to finish in a tie for 14th with a total of 147. Grant Storey gave the Tigers rounds of 79 and 80 to tie for 43rd. Kade Megaffin carded 82 and 90 to finish alone in 53rd, while Micah Fabarez shot 97 and 88 to finish alone in 55th.

Herman was just six strokes back of the individual medalist, Andrew Huseman of Indian Hills Community College, who shot 3-under par overall (139). Indian Hills had three of the top four performers in the tournament and won the event with a team score of 567. Lindenwood was second at its home meet with a total of 580. FHSU shot 621 as a team.

FHSU returns to action next week (Apr. 13-14) at the Washburn Invitational, one of the MIAA sanctioned events for the season. It will be the final meet before the MIAA Championships.

Hutchinson Police investigating armed robbery

Hutch Post

HUTCHINSON— Law enforcement authorities are investigating an armed robbery at a Hutchinson business on Monday afternoon.

Police reported an employee of the Family Affair store in the 1500 Block of East 4th Street reported that two black males entered the store just before 2:30 p.m.

The suspects took items and cash at gunpoint.

There were no injuries and no arrest have been made

Carolyn Mae Jamison

Carolyn Mae Jamison was born in Gove, Kansas, August 16, 1925, to Arthur and Rowena Baker. She and her sister, Opal, and brother, Buster, were small children (Carolyn just 8 months old) when their father died of a ruptured appendix. Their mother, Rowena, was a widow at the age of 22.

Jamison, Carolyn Pic sq

When Carolyn was 4 years old, Rowena married Ross Adams, a rancher and stockman, and the family moved to a farm 20 miles south of Quinter. Carolyn’s siblings, Wayne and Juanita, were born here. They attended the Gove Methodist Church. The family experienced nearly a decade of dirt, wind and drought but never went hungry—said Carolyn, “We ate a lot of eggs, meat, gravy and apples.” As a child, Carolyn and her siblings survived whooping cough, scarlet fever, and flu epidemics. She attended East Lone Star Country School. She enjoyed telling how at the age of 11, she was allowed to take the family car and drive over to pick up the Leighton girls and they’d go to Sunday School and church at the Missouri Flats school house.

Carolyn met Francis Jamison at Quinter High School and they were married November 27, 1941, (Thanksgiving Day), in Smith Center, Kansas. After the wedding, they returned to their respective homes and didn’t tell anyone they’d gotten married. Once word was out, some people said the marriage would never last—little did they know! Teacher, Miss Ethel Jamison, who welcomed and supported their youthful marriage, even threw a wedding shower for them—as a side note, Miss Jamison not only taught Francis and Carolyn in high school, but also all four of their children. Carolyn and Francis made their first home with Francis’ parents, Johnny and Ila Jamison, until Francis graduated high school.

The couple moved into Quinter while Carolyn finished high school and Francis worked for the Quinter Co-op. Following her graduation, they moved to a farm 10 miles northwest of town. They had no electricity or running water, no mail route or phone and the road to the house was just a trail. Eventually they did have electricity by using a 6 volt wind charger, giving them one light bulb to see by, but only if the wind blew. They milked cows and Francis both farmed and worked in town for Carroll Jamison moving houses. Sons, Larry and Galen, were born in Quinter. Francis and Carolyn could hardly wait for them to grow up big enough to play games with them as it was quite lonesome out there. Carolyn enjoyed telling the story of the night the four of them had gone to town and came home much too late, getting caught in a severe snow storm, only to get stuck on the trail to the house. Francis had to walk up to the house and not having taken a coat on their trip to town, wore Carolyn’s coat and tied a diaper on his head. What a welcome sight when she saw him coming over the hill in the tractor, fur coat and diaper still intact, to pull them home. Once Larry started to school they moved to Quinter, to the home they bought and remodeled many times over on Castle Rock Street where Francis and Carolyn lived 62 years. Children, John and Reva, were born in Quinter.

Along with farming, in 1952 Francis and Carolyn bought a jeep trencher and started the Jamison Construction Company. All 3 sons joined in the business as they grew old enough. They laid irrigation, gas and water lines in Kansas and Colorado. In 1968 they bought the Quinter Redi-Mix and Jamison Sand Company which the family operated for nearly 14 years. Carolyn worked as bookkeeper.

What a great home Carolyn and Francis provided for their four children. It was a safe and fun place for growing up. Kids all over Quinter will remember climbing trees, games of “kick the can” and “Annie Annie Over” along with some serious cave building and tunnel designs by the three boys.
Carolyn deeply loved and cared for her husband and family and was always there for them, day or night. She would defend and stand beside them with pride and understanding. She experienced times of sadness and heartache over the years. She and Francis lost their first-born son, Larry, from cancer in 1998. But her faith in God helped her grow stronger, tougher and more beautiful through life.

Carolyn and Francis celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in November 1991 by celebrating their wedding vows at the Church of the Brethren in Quinter. In 2011 they were together 70 years, missing that special anniversary date by just 3 weeks by Francis’ death from cancer. Carolyn spoke often of the good year they had together prior to Francis’ death where they talked about life and death and everything in between. That last year, Francis even taught Carolyn how to use Quick Books in order to continue the financial piece of their business.

Along with being the world’s best grandma according to her 10 grandkids, Carolyn was an artist, well-known for her beautiful china paintings and oil paintings, and through the years enjoyed lessons in photography, guitar and square dancing. She and Francis loved to dance and made a graceful pair on a ballroom floor. Carolyn enjoyed keeping a well manicured lawn, gardening and growing flowers, especially roses and peonies. She enjoyed sewing, writing short stories, flying with Francis, even getting her pilot’s license. Many years were spent serving as den mother, girl scout leader, and chaperone on school trips for their children. She was a life-long member of the Geni-Felte Club and Stitch and Chatter Club. She and Francis were long-time members of the Church of the Brethren.

Following Francis’ death, a day did not go by but what her thoughts and heart were not about him. When cleaning out his bedside table, she found a poem he had left for her which gave her daily comfort and hope, helping her know he was safely home in Heaven and that there was still work for her to do here, but that when that work was done, God would also call her home and what joy it would be to see her come! May her faithfulness live on in the lives of her children and their families.

Carolyn died April 6, 2015, at the Gove County Medical Center in Quinter. She is survived by sons Galen and wife Candy of Quinter, John and wife Karla of Dadesville MO, daughter Reva and husband John of Omaha NE; 10 grandchildren and spouses–Mike and Linda Jamison, Lisa Westfall, Ross Jamison, Traci & Rob Smith, Craig and Melinda Jamison, Christina and David Stocker, Mike and Scarlet Jamison-Harnden, Geni Jamison, Chris and Cammi Neal and Michelle Neal; 21 great grandchildren, 1 great-great grandchild, sister Juanita and husband Eugene Graham and family of Scottsdale, AZ, brother-in-law Bob Maxwell and wife Bea and family of Bend, OR, and a host of relatives and friends.

Funeral services will be 10:00 a.m., Friday, April 10, 2015 at the Quinter Church of the Brethren. Burial will be in the Baker Township Cemetery, Quinter.

There will be no public visitation.

Memorial contributions are suggested to the Quinter Church of the Brethren. Checks made to the church may be sent in care of Schmitt Funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS 67752.

Condolences may be sent to the family at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Hays High announces court for 2015 Prom

hayshighpromroyalty

Hays High School has announced royalty for its 2015 Prom, which is scheduled for Saturday.

The candidates are, front row, Sydney Vahling, Alexis Schaben, Elissa Jensen, Allyson Flax, Amber Klaus, Shelbie Berens and Amanda Dinkel; and, back row, Ethan Waddell, Nathan Romme, Trenton Henningsen, Ethan Deterding, Conrad Hoffman, Quinlan Brungardt and Tristan Callis.

Click the image for a larger photo.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File