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State Library announces 2015 Kansas Notable Books

ks state libraryKansas State Library

TOPEKA–The State Library of Kansas is pleased to announce 15 books featuring quality titles with wide public appeal, either written by Kansans or about a Kansas-related topic. The Kansas Notable Book List is the only honor for Kansas books by Kansans, highlighting our lively contemporary writing community and encouraging readers to enjoy some of the best writing of the authors among us.

A committee of Kansas Center for the Book (KCFB) Affiliates, Fellows, librarians and authors of previous Notable Books identifies these titles from among those published the previous year, and the State Librarian makes the selection for the final List. An awards ceremony will be held at the Kansas Book Festival, September 12, 2015, to recognize the talented Notable Book authors.

Throughout the award year, KCFB promotes all the titles on that year’s List electronically, at literary events, and among librarians and booksellers.

For more information about the Kansas Notable Book project, call (785) 296-3296, visit www.kslib.info/notablebooks or email [email protected].

2014 Kansas Notable Books

999 Kansas Characters: Ad Astra, a Biographical Series
by Dave Webb, Terry Rombeck, and Beccy Tanner
Published by the Kansas Heritage Center
This fact-filled, fully illustrated book features biographical articles about 161 characters with Kansas connections: adventurers, astronauts, discoverers, explorers, pilots, pioneers and scientists. Their adventures and discoveries have helped define the Sunflower State and its colorful heritage. Includes well-known Kansans such as George Washington Carver and Charles and George Sternberg — plus dozens more, like physicist Worth Seagondollar, Elmer McCollum, the discoverer of vitamin B, and cancer researcher Carol Fabian. This is the first in a 3 part planned biographical series.

Bluebird
by Lindsey Yankey
Published by Simply Read Books
The wind is missing! Little Bluebird has never flown without her friend the wind before and is afraid to try. So she sets off on an adventure to find it. Is it making wishes with the dandelions? Playing with the kites? Tickling the grass? Dancing with the balloons? She searches everywhere. In the end, she finds more than her favorite friend–she finds confidence too! This debut book by Lawrence author and illustrator is sure to capture the hearts of children with their enchanting illustrations.

A Carol Dickens Christmas: A Novel
by Thomas Fox Averill
Published by University of New Mexico Press
It’s Christmas and Carol Dickens’s life is in a major transition. Her son Finn, a talented trumpeter player, is about to leave for college. Her ex-husband, a real-estate wheeler-dealer, wants to sell their properties in Kansas and move to Arizona. Her wheelchair-bound friend, Laurence, has fallen in love with her. To top it all off, Scraps, the family dog, is dying. As her world spins out of control, Carol seeks refuge in her research on the use of the semicolon- and in her ritual of cooking the perfect series of Victorian holiday meals inspired by A Christmas Carol.

Chasing Weather: Tornadoes, Tempests, and Thunderous Skies in Word and Image
by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg and Stephen Locke
Published by Ice Cube Press
“The sky is made of rivers before and after they became rivers,” writes Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg. Weather subtly shapes our day, infuses our moods and interactions, and at times, completely re-orients our lives. Catching moments of stunning beauty and surprising shifts in the sky helps make the vibrant world more visible. This book pairs Kansas Poet Laureate Emeritus Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg’s evocative poetry with photographer Stephen Locke’s stirring imagery for a unique collaboration.

The Darkest Period: The Kanza Indians and Their Last Homeland, 1846-1873
by Ronald D. Parks
Published by University of Oklahoma Press
Before their relocation to the Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma, the Kanza Indians spent twenty-seven years on a reservation near Council Grove. This is the story of those years of decline in Kanza history following the loss of the tribe’s original homeland in Kansas. The Kanzas’ story is not reduced to one of hapless Indian victims maligned by the American government, but rather demonstrates how the Kanzas persisted in their struggle to exercise political autonomy while maintaining traditional social customs up to the time of removal and beyond.

The Devil’s Workshop: A Novel of Scotland Yard’s Murder Squad
by Alex Grecian
Published by G. P. Putnam’s Sons
London, 1890: Four vicious murderers have escaped from prison, part of a plan gone terribly wrong, and now it is up to Scotland Yard’s Murder Squad to hunt down the convicts before the men can resume their bloody spree. But they might already be too late. The killers have retribution in mind, and one of them is heading straight toward a member of the Murder Squad—and his family. And that isn’t even the worst of it. During the escape, the killers have stumbled upon the location of another notorious murderer: Jack the Ripper is loose once more.

Field Guide to the Common Grasses of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska
by Iralee Barnard
Published by University Press of Kansas
From the more familiar, like buffalograss, to the less recognized, such as ticklegrass, each of the seventy species profiled in these pages appears in full-color to aide both novice and expert in identifying field grasses. Features such as a handy system of “finding lists” allow quick navigation for identification of an unknown grass. An illustrated glossary, leaf comparison section, and table of flowering dates provide additional information for recognizing and appreciating various species.

Girl in Reverse
by Barbara Stuber
Published by Margaret K. McElderry Books
With the Korean War raging and the fear of “Commies” everywhere, Lily’s Asian heritage makes her a target at school. She is sick of the racism she faces, a fact her adoptive parents won’t take seriously. Then her brainy little brother, Ralph, finds a box containing clues to her past that lead them to rare Chinese artifacts at the art museum. With help from Ralph, the school janitor, and an artistic genius named Elliot, Lily summons the courage to confront her own remarkable story.

The Kansas Relays: Track and Field Tradition in the Heartland
by Joe D. Schrag
Published by Adina Publishing
This is the first book devoted to the rich history of the classic track and field celebration that makes up the Kansas Relays. The author introduces readers to historic events, talented people, and unique moments that have made Lawrence, Kansas a springtime destination for track and field enthusiasts since 1923. This well researched collection of compelling stories, both familiar and new, is illustrated with photos of people and memorabilia from the Relays. Includes six appendices of historical information.

Michael Pearce’s Taste of the Kansas Outdoors Cookbook
by Michael Pearce
Published by the Wichita Eagle and Beacon Publishing Co.
This undeniably Kansas cookbook contains more than 50 proven recipes mixed with some of outdoor journalist, Michael Pearce’s favorite hunting and fishing stories and photographs. These recipes with accompanying photos encourage readers to experience the unique flavor of the Kansas Outdoors. The recipes range from simple to complex and often include step-by-step procedures on how to prepare the game. Venison Hawaiian Sliders, Pheasant Macaroons, Mustard Fried Crappie — you won’t find these recipes on the menu at…well, pretty much anywhere. But make no mistake, it’s Kansas dining at its finest.

Music I Once Could Dance To
by Roy J. Beckemeyer
Published by Coal City Press
This first collection of poetry by Roy Beckemeyer uses the theme of music to poetically travel to the interior and across the prairie and the earth. Whether writing about the cold morning moon of January (“the glossy white 20-pound bond moon/ the cotton-ball moon”) or how “center-pivot sprinklers/ dance a spindly-legged/ ballet around the fields” in August in western Kansas, he helps readers see the extraordinary in the ordinary. He instinctively trusts the image of the poem to convey the poem’s layers of meaning, and he also leaps off any familiar edge to try new forms and inspirations.

The Ogallala Road: A Memoir of Love and Reckoning
by Julene Bair
Published by Viking/Penguin
Julene Bair has inherited part of a large farm and fallen in love with a rancher from Kansas’s beautiful Smoky Valley. A single mother, she means to provide her son with the father he longs for and preserve the Bair farm for the next generation, honoring her own father’s wish and commandment, “Hang on to your land!” But part of her legacy is a share of the ecological harm the Bair Farm has done: each growing season her family—like many other irrigators—pumps over two hundred million gallons out of the Ogallala aquifer. The rapidly disappearing aquifer is the sole source of water on the vast western plains, and her family’s role in its depletion haunts her.

Railroad Empire across the Heartland: Rephotographing Alexander Gardner’s Westward Journey
by James E. Sherow, photographs by John R. Charlton
Published by University of New Mexico Press
Photographer Alexander Gardner documented the construction of the Union Pacific Railway across Kansas in 1867. This book presents 90 pairs of recent photographs by John R. Charlton paired with scenes Gardner recorded, duplicating the exact location and time of day of the originals. James E. Sherow uses the paired images to show how Indian and Anglo-American land-use practices affected the landscape. Charlton’s rephotography captures the transformation of the grasslands, harnessed by the powerful forces of the railroad.

Soldiers in the Army of Freedom: The 1st Kansas Colored, the Civil War’s First African American Combat Unit
by Ian Michael Spurgeon
Published by University of Oklahoma Press
Composed primarily of former slaves, the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry saw major combat in the trans-Mississippi theater of the Civil War. The author draws upon sources such as pension applications to chart military service, and to reveal the regiment’s role in countering white prejudices by defying stereotypes. Despite naysayers’ bigoted predictions, these black soldiers proved themselves as capable as their white counterparts, and so helped shape the evolving attitudes of leading politicians. This long-overdue reconstruction of the regiment brings to life the men of the 1st Kansas Colored as they battled both the Confederate forces and skepticism within Union ranks.

Waiting on the Sky: More Flyover People Essays
by Cheryl Unruh
Published by Quincy Press
In this collection of 72 essays, Cheryl Unruh once again connects with Kansas on a personal level. She writes about growing up on this open land, seeing the Arkansas River at flood stage in 1965, the virtues of wing windows in cars, and about telling ghost stories with her brother and cousins in the spooky upstairs of her grandmother’s farmhouse. The Kansas sky and weather are characters in her lifelong story. “We who live on the prairie love our sky. It is as much a part of the landscape as the land itself. While the earth gives us roots … the sky gives us flight, imagination…”

 

Pony Express riders begin annual ride into Kansas onto California

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (AP) — The Pony Express will be riding again for the next two weeks.

The 35th Annual Pony Express Reride left Monday morning from the site in St. Joseph where the mail-delivery service started 155 years ago. The Pony Express began in 1860, with each rider going about 80 miles before handing mail to the next rider.

The St. Joseph News-Press reports about 550 people will each ride nearly 5 miles over the route, with the ride scheduled to end June 25 in Old Sacramento, California.

Riders from St. Joseph will hand packages to the Kansas Chapter of the National Pony Express Association in Elwood, Kansas. After that, riders will travel to Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and Nevada before arriving in California.

The National Pony Express Association is hosting the event. Follow the ride on Twitter @PonyExpress4

Smoky Hills Public Television looking for American Graduate Champions

amgrad_logoSmoky Hill Public Television

BUNKER HILL–An American Graduate Champion commits their time, skills and resources to make sure that young people succeed. He or she is an individual who plays an active role in improving educational outcomes for students. This person can be a parent, teacher, community member or public official who is committed to tackling the nation’s dropout crisis.

“Stories of Champions” is a national campaign supported by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. American Graduate Champions are influencing young people in our communities across the country each and every day.

If you know someone who has worked to keep students on the path to graduation, nominate that person to be honored as an American Graduate Champion. Send a one-page letter of recommendation to Smoky Hills Public Television. If your champion uses public media to help in their efforts we would like to hear about that as well.

Submit a letter with contact information for both you and your nominee to:

Smoky Hills Public Television
Stories of Champions
P.O. Box 9
Bunker Hill, KS 67626

The deadline for submission is July 1, 2015.

Animal shelter unsettled after Kansas inmate controversy

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Six months after the director of the Hutchinson Animal Shelter resigned amid a disagreement over use of inmate labor, the city is still looking for his replacement.

Former shelter director Richard Havens resigned earlier this year. He had complained that inmates from the Hutchinson Correctional Facility who worked at the shelter were unreliable and made sexually suggestive remarks to female workers.

The Hutchinson News reports city officials discussed returning inmates to the shelter but it hasn’t happened yet. All four technicians working in the months before and after Havens resigned have left the shelter and been replaced.

Police Lt. John Taylor, who is overseeing the shelter, says he wants a new director hired before any decision on inmate labor is made.

Ellis continues discussion of water-related issues

ellis city logoELLIS–Funding requests from several outside agencies will be presented during tonight’s meeting of the Ellis City Council.

The agenda also includes a number of water-related issues.

The meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in Ellis City Hall.

The complete agenda is below.

AGENDA
June 15, 2015
REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF ELLIS
City Hall – Council Meeting Room

BILLS ORDINANCE REVIEW WORK SESSION BEGINS AT 7:00 P.M.
ROLL CALL AND MEETING CALL TO ORDER AT 7:30 P.M.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
AMENDMENTS TO AGENDA (if needed)
1) CONSENT AGENDA
a) Minutes from Regular Meeting on June 1, 2015
b) Bills Ordinance #1975
(Council will review for approval under one motion under the consent agenda. By majority vote of the governing body, any item may be removed from the consent agenda and considered separately)
PUBLIC COMMENTS
(Each speaker will be limited to five minutes. If several people from the group wish to speak on same subject, the group must appoint a spokesperson. ALL comments from public on agenda items must be during Public Comment. Once council begins their business meeting, no more comments from public will be allowed.)
2) PRESENTATIONS OF AWARDS, PROCLAMATIONS, REQUESTS & PETITIONS (HEARINGS)
3) SPECIAL ORDER
a) Ellis Railroad Museum 2016 Budget Request
b) Ellis Community Foundation 2016 Budget Request
c) Ellis County Coalition for Economic Development 2016 Budget Request
4) UNFINISHED BUSINESS
a) Update on Waterline Improvement Project – Buck Driggs, Driggs Design Group
b) Update on Wastewater Treatment Plant Improvement Project – Brian Spano, Wilson and Co.
c) Update on Water Exploration Process
d) Consider Seeking Bids for Engineering Services for Water Exploration Project
e) Consider Acceptance of Audit Report
f) Consider Changes to Property Insurance Policy
g) Review Revisions to Water Conservation Plan
h) Consider Ordinance Amending Definitions Within Water Conservation Code
i) Consider Ordinance Establishing Water Rate Structure
j) Ratify Change in Vendor for Sewer Pump Purchase
5) NEW BUSINESS
a) Consider Approval of Appointment to Cemetery Committee
b) Discuss Coordination of Community Volunteers on City Property
c) Consider Seeking Bids on Tree Removal
d) Consider Purchase of Street Material
e) Consider Purchase and Installation of Transducer Tubes
f) Consider Approval of Revisions to Utility Policy
6) REPORTS FROM CITY OFFICIALS
a) Administrative
1) Public Works
(1) Comparative Water Report
(2) Current Well Levels
(3) Department Update
2) Police
(1) Department Update
3) City Clerk
(1) Reminder on Work Session
(2) Department Update
4) Attorney
5) Mayor/Council
EXECUTIVE SESSIONS
7) ADJOURNMENT

HPD Activity Log June 12-14

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hpd actvity log sponsor hess bittel fletcher

The Hays Police Department responded to 12 animal calls and 12 traffic stops Friday, June 12, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Mental Health Call–Hays; 12:07 AM; 12:30AM
Pursuit/Chase–200 block E 8th St, Hays; 1 AM; 1:11 AM
Civil Dispute–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 2:40 AM
Animal Call–100 block 7th St, Hays; 8:55 AM
Animal Call–600 block Vine St, Hays; 9:08 AM
Welfare Check–1700 block Donald Dr, Hays; 9:32 AM
Burglary/vehicle–400 block E 11th St, Hays; 6/11 8 PM; 6/12 7 AM
Animal Call–17th and Walnut, Hays; 10:56 AM
Identity Theft–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 12:15 PM
Theft (general)–500 block W 16th St, Hays; 5/20/15 12 PM; 6/1/15 12 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–500 block Vine St, Hays; 1:24 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–2000 block Vine St, Hays; 1:49 PM
Worthless Check–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 1:58 PM
Shoplifting–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 12:16 PM; 12:18 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–1000 block Fort St, Hays; 2:23 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–100 block 4th St, Hays; 2:40 PM
Suspicious Person–500 block W 27th St, Hays; 3:12 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–2000 block Metro Ln, Hays; 3:36 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–2700 block Englewood Dr, Hays; 4:15 PM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–1100 block Vine St, Hays; 4:47 PM
Harassment (All Other)–100 block W 4th St, Hays; 4:59 PM
Welfare Check–500 block Halladay St, Hays; 5:06 PM
Welfare Check–27th and Canterbury, Hays; 5:14 PM
MV Accident-Personal Injury–500 block W 27th St, Hays; 05:43 PM
Juvenile Complaint–2200 block Marjorie Dr, Hays; 6:20 PM
Domestic Disturbance–2800 block E 8th St, Hays; 9:28 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–1700 block Saline River Rd, Hays; 9:33 PM
Contempt of Court/Fail to Pay–1200 block Maple St, Hays; 6/9/15 5 PM
Suspicious Vehicle–1200 block Main St, Hays; 11:21

The Hays Police Department responded to 11 animal calls and 22 traffic stops Saturday, June 13, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Domestic Disturbance–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 12:01 AM
Driving Under the Influence–1600 block E 25th St, Hays; 12:07 AM
Underage Possession of CMB/LIQ–200 block W 8th St, Hays; 1:55 AM
Intoxicated Subject–400 block E 6th St, Hays; 2:03 AM
Disturbance – Noise–400 block W 7th St, Hays; 2:40 AM
Battery – simple–200 block Ash St, Hays; 3:22 AM; 3:30 AM
Criminal Damage to Property–400 block W 15th St, Hays; 3:30 AM; 3:35 AM
Animal Call–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 9:52 AM
Animal Call–300 block W 17th St, Hays; 9:55 AM
Found/Lost Property–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 11:28 AM
Found/Lost Property–300 block E 22nd St, Hays; 12:12 PM
Suspicious Person–800 block Main St, Hays; 1 PM
Custody Dispute–3400 block Vine St, Hays; 1:41 PM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–400 block W 5th St, Hays; 3:01 PM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–400 block W 5th St, Hays; 3:51 PM
Civil Dispute–500 block W 17th St, Hays; 5:22 PM
Disturbance – General–1900 block Vine St, Hays; 5:45 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–1300 block W 27th St, Hays; 7:38 PM
Disturbance – Noise–300 block W 6th St, Hays; 8:57 PM
Credit Card Violations–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 1:45 AM
Disturbance – Noise–400 block W 5th St, Hays; 11:16 PM
Disturbance – Noise–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 11:32 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 6 animal calls and 9 traffic stops Sunday, June 14, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Water Use Violation–2600 block Vine St, Hays; 12:42 AM
Criminal Transport–500 block W Santa Fe Ave, Garden City; 12:46 AM
Animal Call–100 block E 9th St, Hays; 2:07 AM
Burglary/residence–400 block W 5th St, Hays; 12 AM; 2 AM
Aggravated Assault–1300 block Milner St, Hays; 3:06 AM
Driving Under the Influence–3600 block Vine St, Hays; 4:10 AM
Criminal Damage to Property–100 block W 43rd St, Hays; 6/12 9 AM; 6/12 9:15 AM
Found/Lost Property–1300 block Vine St, Hays; 9:10 AM
Unwanted Person–1000 block W 28th St, Hays; 10:20 AM
Criminal Damage to Property–Hays; 12:47 PM
911 Hangup Call–2700 block Epworth St, Hays; 1:08 PM
Aggravated Battery–2800 block Vine St, Hays; 1:21 PM
Animal At Large–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 2:46 PM
Unwanted Person–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 3:24 PM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–500 block W 19th St, Hays; 6/12 4 PM; 6/14 3 PM
Fire–1500 block US 183 Alt Hwy, Hays; 4:57 PM
Domestic Disturbance–400 block E 7th St, Hays; 6/8 9 AM
Animal Call–2900 block Walnut St, Hays; 7:15 PM
Theft (general)–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 6:02 PM; 6:03 PM
Battery – Domestic–600 block E 5th St, Hays; 9:30 PM; 9:39 PM
Disturbance – General–3600 block Hall St, Hays; 9:57 PM

Police investigate Kansas shooting death

JUNCTION CITY – Law enforcement authorities in Geary County are investigating a shooting on Sunday in Junction City.

Police responded to 2714 Elm Creek Drive just after at 5:30 p.m. Sunday and found a man with a gunshot wound to the head.

According to Detective Sergeant Trish Giordano a 44-year old man was found deceased on the front porch of the residence.

An autopsy will be done Monday in Topeka.

The name of the victim has not been released.

Geneva ‘Gene’ Cooper

Geneva “Gene” Cooper, 94, of Colby, died Friday, June 12, 2015 at Hays Medical Center.

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She was born Aug 24, 1920 to Peter and Lucy (Nordman) Bixenman in Wien, MO. She graduated from Menlo High School in 1938. She worked at the Cooper Hotel where she met her husband Hubert Cooper. They were married on Oct 31, 1949 in Colby. She later worked for Classic Dress Shop and Caldwell’s Appliance Store. Gene enjoyed working with RSVP (Retired Senior Volunteer Program), Election Board and Red Cross Blood Drives.

Preceded in death by her husband, Hubert; brothers, Robert and LeRoy Bixenman; sisters, Shirley Hemstrom and Patricia Hafer.

Survived by her daughters, Marla (Howard) Reed, of Salina and Karla (Rod) McAtee, of Hays; sister, Florene (Jerry) Messamore; five grandchildren and three great grandchildren.

Visitation will be 4-8:00pm, Monday, June 15, 2015 at Baalmann Mortuary, Colby. Vigil service will be at 6:30pm. Funeral Mass will be 10:00am, Tuesday, June 16, 2015 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Colby. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. Memorials are suggested to the Church or RSVP in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby KS 67701. Online condolences: www.baalmannmortuary.com

Pauline Iles Nicholson

Pauline Iles Nicholson passed away on Tuesday, June 8, 2015, at the age of 93. She was the wife of the late Philip W. Nicholson of Ellis, Kansas, and the mother of three children, all of whom survive her: Paulette (Nicholson) Harp and Jack A. Nicholson, both of Ellis, and Philip T. Nicholson of Boulder, Colorado. Her descendants also include six grandchildren and six great-grand-children.

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Pauline was born in October 29, 1922, in a mining town in eastern Arizona. Her father, Louis Taylor Iles, worked as an accountant at the Inspiration Copper Mine, and her mother, Marguerite (Childress) Iles, worked at the company store. The family lived in Inspiration, a small, company-owned town on the top of a mountain ridge that overlooked the mine operations—the huge open pits, the large smelters that heated the raw ore to separate out the molten copper, and the trolleys that ran out along banks of dark black slag to dump molten waste products.

After graduating from the Miami High School, Pauline entered the University of Arizona where she majored in nutrition. World War II intervened during her junior year when Pauline met a young lieutenant, Philip W. Nicholson, who was stationed at an air base in Tucson. The couple became engaged and then married just before Capt. Nicholson’s crew embarked for India and then flew on to China to carry out bombing missions against the Japanese forces. The couple’s first son, Philip Taylor, was born in 1944, shortly before the end of WWII. After demobilization, Capt. Nicholson and Pauline returned to Ellis, Kansas, his home town, where they established a residence and expanded their family. A second son, Jack Alexander, was born in 1948, and a daughter, Paulette Iles, in 1950.

As a wife and mother, Pauline created a warm family atmosphere that combined affection, intellectual stimulation, a sense of engagement with broader world, kindness and tolerance, perseverance, and attention to those little things in life that ultimately add up to make a big difference for everyone involved. She was a great cook—who can forget the taste of her authentic enchiladas and her other recipes, dinner-in-the-dish, roast chuck with carrots and potatoes, homemade sweet rolls and raisin cream pie? And Pauline was known as an excellent conversationalist, as someone who listened carefully to what someone was saying and then asked insightful questions. When tragedies intervened in the lives of others, she was always ready to respond promptly and effectively, as on the two occasions when she welcomed children who’d suddenly and tragically lost one or both parents into her home where she cared for them as she would her own. Pauline will always be remembered by her friends and by her children and grandchildren with the greatest love, affection, appreciation, gratitude and respect for a life well-lived.

A memorial reception on June 20th, 2015 from 3:00 – 5:00 pm at 1807 Maple St, Ellis, KS (2 blks east of Ellis High School)

In lieu of flowers, please consider a gift to Hospice in memory of Pauline Nicholson, c/o Keithley Funeral Chapel, 400 E. 17th St., Ellis, KS 67637.

Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed [email protected].

Marguerite Mae Albers

Marguerite Mae Albers, age 93, passed away on June 12, 2015 at the Rhode Island Suites, Ransom, Kansas. She was born on February 11, 1922 in Bazine, Kansas the daughter of George John Seuser, I and Marie Veronica (Jedlicka) Seuser.

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She was a homemaker and a member of the First Mennonite Church, Ransom. On September 16, 1945 she married Donald William Albers in Bison, Kansas. He died June 13, 2001.

Survivors include two sons, Albert and his wife Jeanette of Ransom and William and his wife Marlene of Bison; two daughters, Donna and Fred Klitzke of Phoenix, Arizona and Linda and Stuart Dietz of Hudson, Kansas; a sister Mildred Littler of LaCrosse, Kansas; one brother George J. Sauser, II or Marquette, Kansas; 15 grandchildren and 25 great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her brother William Seuser.

Funeral service will be on Tuesday, June 16, 2015, 11:00 A.M. at the First Mennonite Church, Ransom. Burial in the Ransom Cemetery. Friends may call at Fitzgerald Funeral Home, Ness City on Sunday from 10:00 A.M. until 9:00 P.M. and on Monday from 9:00 A.M. until 9:00 P.M. with the family present from 7:00 P.M. until 9:00 P.M.

Memorial contributions may be given to the First Mennonite Church, Ransom.

HPD offers answers to questions about new bike lanes in Hays

bike lane sign cu

BY AMY BALTODANO
Hays Post

The new bike lanes throughout Hays are the talk of the town at the moment, and the Hays Police Department is doing its best to try answer questions and educate the public.

Traffic laws do apply to those on their cycles, according to HPD Corp. Brandon Hauptman, who leads the HPD bike patrol program

“Bicyclists have the right to the roadway just as any other vehicle does. Now, the biggest difference is when there is a bike lane, if there is a bike lane provided, they have to use the bike lane,” he said. “Otherwise, they can use a traffic lane just like a vehicle can — but must also abide by all the traffic laws. They also have to stop at stop lights, they have to stop for stop signs, have to use signals.”

He encouraged anyone with questions to visit the bikehays.com website. On the site, residents can find instructional videos telling how to correctly use the bike lanes, sharing the trail with other cyclists as well as a map showing where you can to through the city.

Proper attire must be worn and your bicycle must be properly equipped. Riders should wear a helmet and have a red reflector on the back.

“Now, we would advise if you are riding at night, a red light helps too, it just makes you so much more visible but statute only requires a red reflector on the back and a light on the front and your helmet,” Hauptman said.

There are many different of options to choose from when thinking about the correct light.

“A lot of times the tail lights are flashing and that makes them very visible to the vehicles,” said HPD Lt. Brandon Wright. “There all kinds of headlights. They can attach a flashlight they already have, there are all kinds of bike specific lights at all price ranges available at local bike stores and on the Internet.”

And regarding those markings that have the community buzzing, Wright believes they are a good idea.

“It’s new and it takes a while for people to understand what’s going on. We are very excited about these. They are going to make the road safer,” he said. “We have a lot of bicycle-vehicle accidents occur while bicyclist is on the sidewalk and crossing alleys, driveways and jetting out into the street without stopping.”

According to Wright, “A lot of those bike lane markings are in the middle of the driving lane, people are curious as to what that means. Well, as you look through the map and look through town, some areas you’re going to see bike lanes. These are going to be the white lines with the bike symbols in them, those are bike lanes. Vehicles or pedestrians should not be traveling through those.”

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In other parts of town, bike markings in the middle of the road are designed to help lead cyclists to routes, which have been designed to use stop signs and connect to schools and parks.

Wright believes this will help “increase the safety for drivers as well and make sure you are aware when there are bicycles in the roadway. There are dotted bike lane lines are solid then go dotted and that is where vehicles are able to cross over.”

“If you are going to pass, you have to give at least 3-foot clearance at minimum. The other part of that is make sure it is safe to do so that there are no vehicles coming, because you are going to move over a little bit to give them a bit of room, if it’s safe to do so,” Hauptman added.

In regards to using bike trails, Wright said, “The striped bike lanes you still need to travel in the same direction as the vehicles, if there is only a bike lane on one side of the street, that’s  not for two-way bike travel. You still should be riding in the same direction as the traffic flows in the street.”

“We think this is going to increase safety for bicyclists in the city and hopefully encourage people to get out and use those bikes,”  he added.

Hauptman added cyclists are prohibited from using sidewalks in business districts, and also said the lanes will help cyclists avoid riding in the gutter, which is often filled with loose gravel or other debris.

For all questions you may have regarding bike safety and the bike lanes, you can visit the website bikehays.com.

Sunday front offers up more precipitation for Ellis County

While Ellis County didn’t receive the torrential downpour that struck much of central Kansas on Sunday, June brought yet another refreshing rainfall.

Early reports in Ellis County range from 0.12 inches southwest of Hays, to a whopping 1.35 inches between Hays and Ellis. Hays receive just more than a quarter-inch of precipitation.

RELATED: Front brings flooding to central Kansas communities.

Russell County reports ranged from 0.17 inches of more than three-quarters of an inch. Rain diminished to the west, with far eastern Trego County receiving about a half-inch of rain, while counties to the west reported near trace accumulation.

The front dumped rainfall on central Kansas, with Harvey County reporting accumulation of nearly 6 inches.

Skies are expected to clear early this week, with the next chance of rainfall arriving late Wednesday afternoon.

Click HERE for a complete forecast.

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