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Martin asks FHSU ‘family’ to recruit, retain and give at convocation

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Mirta M. Martin, president of Fort Hays State University, called upon faculty and staff this morning to help not just with recruitment of students but also with the process of ensuring that those students successfully engage in their courses and complete their degrees.

Dr. Mirta Martin, FHSU president
Dr. Mirta Martin, FHSU president

President Martin made her remarks during the annual Convocation ceremony, which launched the 2015-2016 academic year. Classes begin on Monday.

The ceremony also included several awards, and Dr. Chapman Rackaway, professor of political science, received the university’s highest honor when Dr. Martin named him the President’s Distinguished Scholar.

In her address to several hundred assembled faculty and staff, the president noted that the university had embarked on an ambitious “re-engineering” project not long after her arrival a year ago. “Together, we envisioned a new beginning for Fort Hays State; one that builds on our strengths — our programs of distinction and our people of excellence,” she said. “We engaged you, our faculty and staff, and our students, in our discussions. We asked for honest opinions and creative input. We listened to each other. We explored many different suggestions. Our discussions were transparent and open to candid feedback. We shared the information we gathered with our entire community. We found we were great at many things, but there was room to be better.”

Emphasizing again and again the spirit of family, President Martin called upon faculty and staff to shift from a culture of access to a culture of completion.

“We should be engaged to produce graduates who can think for themselves, who are articulate and persuasive, who are critical, creative and collaborative, and who are technologically proficient and competent across disciplines,” she said.

President Martin said recruitment of students must be everyone’s job. She announced that last year, for the first time in FHSU’s history, revenues generated by tuition and fees, at 31.7 percent, were greater than revenues received from state appropriations, at 27.3 percent. She said that more than ever, Fort Hays State is heavily dependent on tuition dollars and must continue to grow.

“Talk to your family members, to your friends, to everyone,” she said. “Spread the word about all that is good and great at our university. Talk about our programs of distinction. Talk about our people of excellence. Talk about our Honors College and how bright minds are making Fort Hays State their destination of choice. Talk about our international exchange programs and how our students are able to study abroad at one of our incredible partner institutions for the same low FHSU tuition cost. Talk about how our Graduate School offers students the opportunity to continue their exceptional education right here, on site or online. Show your excitement and passion for our university. Get new Tigers here!”

Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.
Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.

She insisted, though, that the job must not stop with getting students here and unpacked. “That’s when our work really begins,” she said. “We must ensure those students cross the finish line. We must ensure they graduate. Successful student outcomes are our top priority. Retention is everyone’s business.”

The president also announced some new initiatives for the coming year:
·        A mentoring program with a goal of pairing every student with an alumni mentor.
·        The first-ever Hispanic College Institute, a “four-day, three-night residential program to introduce first generation Hispanics to a university environment.”
·        A plan to “explore and implement at least one cross-border program outside of China.”
·        Beginning in the “next few days,” implementation will begin on a new resource technology system to integrate management systems across campus, including student and financial data.

RELATED: New provost talks about changes on FHSU campus

Following the president’s address and introductions of all the new members of the faculty and staff, award winners were revealed for Faculty Member of the Year, Edmund Shearer Advisor of Year and the President’s Distinguished Scholar.

Dr. Chapman Rackaway, who was named this year’s President’s Distinguished Scholar, received a medallion and a $1,500 cash award. He was selected by President Martin from recommendations forwarded by an evaluation committee of previous presidential scholars. Rackaway will give a scholarly presentation later in the fall semester.

Kathleen Ward, associate professor of nursing, was named Faculty Member of the Year. The honor carries a $1,000 cash award, provided by Deron O’Connor, president of Commerce Bank, and the membership of the Academic Council.

Angela Walters, associate professor of informatics, was named the Shearer Advisor of the Year, which also carries a $500 cash award, sponsored by Commerce Bank.

Dr. April Park, assistant professor of psychology, was the recipient of the Heinrichs Outstanding Undergraduate Research Mentor Award, named in honor of the late Dr. John Heinrichs. The award recognizes a faculty member for commitment of time and energy in encouraging and developing research by undergraduate students. The $500 award for this honor goes to the winner’s home department in order to benefit the undergraduate research program. The monetary award is sponsored by the Office of the Provost, the Undergraduate Research Experience, and the Office of Scholarships and Sponsored Projects.

Amanda Ergun, assistant director of the English as Second Language program, won the Internationalization of the Campus and Curriculum Award, first presented in 2013. She will receive a $500 award from the Office of the Provost.

The Faculty Member of the Year was chosen from among the previous academic year’s winners of Research, Service and Outstanding Teaching Awards. One faculty member each semester is presented with an award in each of those three categories. Ward was one of the two 2014-2015 winners of the Outstanding Teaching Award. The other was Dr. LeAnn Brown, assistant professor of management.

The two Service Award winners during 2014-2015 were Dr. Eric Deneault, assistant professor of applied technology, and Dr. Fred Britten, professor of communication sciences and disorders. The 2014-2015 Research and Scholarly Activities Award winners were Dr. Bob Meier, professor of informatics, and Dr. Yasuhiro Kobayashi, assistant professor of biological sciences. Each of those awards carries a $500 cash benefit.

The Shearer Advising Award winner is selected from nominees of the university’s academic colleges. Walters was nominated by the College of Business and Entrepreneurship. The other nominees were Dr. Bryan Bennett, assistant professor of political science from the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; Dr. Lorie Cook-Benjamin, associate professor of teacher education from the College of Education; and Dr. Jenny Manry, associate professor of nursing, from the College of Health and Behavioral Sciences.

The Shearer Award winner receives a stipend of $500, and the other three nominees receive $150. The cash award is sponsored by Commerce Bank. Walters will also be nominated by the university for the National Academic Advising Association Award.

Recognition of adjunct faculty for outstanding online education was also continued this year. One from each of the university’s academic colleges was recognized: Ronald Evans from the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; Josh Jones from the College of Business and Entrepreneurship; Martin Kollman from the College of Education; and Emily Pinkston from the College of Health and Behavioral Sciences.

Changes at FHSU highlighted during faculty convocation

By JAMES BELL
Hays Post

The annual faculty convocation at Fort Hays State University welcomed faculty and staff to the new academic year Wednesday with a clear message — the university is changing.

FHSU re-engineering began last year under the direction of President Mirta Martin, and now with many other key positions in the administration in place, and approval for most changes from the Kansas Board of Regents, this year will see new directions in many of its academic and administrative units.

20150812_095052
FHSU Provost Graham Glynn addresses faculty and staff.

This change is necessary to stay viable according to the administration, but has made many feel uneasy at the university.

In response to that concern, FHSU Provost Graham Glynn addressed that concern directly at the convocation.

“I’m scared we’re not moving fast enough,” he said, showing new academic buildings at partner universities in China and highlighting their interest in expanding education within their country.

FHSU has had long partnerships with several Chinese homeland institutions over the years.

Despite the uneasiness from quick and major changes at FHSU, Glynn also informed the audience of some of the many achievements FHSU is expected to accomplish this year, including recorded enrollment, and a ranking of the largest comprehensive graduate school in the state.

RELATED: Martin asks FHSU ‘family’ to recruit, retain and give at convocation

During his talk, Glynn also highlighted the need for better communication throughout the university.

“I’m going to ask the faculty to tell me,” he said after announcing a workload task force will be created to evaluate each department’s student credit hours by department, rather than a university-wide number.

That is once piece of the university’s future as future faculty development will also be driven by department and faculty input, rather than directives from the administration.

When hiring faculty Glynn said it will be driven by current staff expectations.

“I want them to be your values and your expectations,” he said.

With new process, departments and expansion, not everything tried will work and Glynn said he expects failure to be a part of the FHSU culture, but that should not be punished.

“Don’t look for blame, look for ways to make things better,” he said.

Kansas Board of Ed revises restraint rules

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Board of Education has given initial approval to new rules on student restraint that establish procedures for parents who believe emergency safety interventions have been used improperly on their children.

The board gave initial approval Tuesday to the changes on seclusion and restraint on students in emergency situations.

The Wichita Eagle reports the regulations now go to the Attorney General’s Office and the Department of Administration.

The changes come after the Legislature passed a bill last session known as the “Freedom from Unsafe Restraint and Seclusion Act.”

The new regulations set up a procedure for parents to seek an investigation if they think emergency safety interventions have been improperly used. Parents can also request an administrative review to determine if a school district has violated a law.

KFIX Rock News: Son Of John Mellencamp Serves Jail 12 Hours At A Time

johnmellencampBLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) – John Mellencamp’s 20-year-old son is serving a four-day jail sentence in 12-hour stints because he suffers from a panic disorder.

The Bloomington Herald-Times reports a judge is allowing Speck Mellencamp to serve his time from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. so a health care professional is on duty when he’s there.

He received the sentence after he pleaded guilty in April to misdemeanor battery stemming from a fight in July 2013.

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Photo credits: Andrea Sartorati

U. of Michigan Facebook pages hacked with risque links

michiganANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Facebook pages including those for University of Michigan football and basketball got way off-topic during a series of early-morning posts.

Posts from the official accounts were made Wednesday promoting links to risqué photos of celebrities and a host of other subjects.

Associate Athletic Director Kurt Svoboda told The Detroit News it was “working with our partners.” In a later statement, the school said the situation was resolved and offensive posts deleted. The Michigan Athletics page also was affected.

Posts on the department’s Twitter account said the pages were hacked.

Nikki Sunstrum, the school’s social media director, told The Ann Arbor News in an email it was “an unprecedented issue, and we are taking all necessary precautions to protect the safety and security of our other numerous social media properties.”

Wichita State student charged in death of newborn

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 19-year-old Wichita State student faces first-degree murder charges in the death of an infant.

The Wichita Eagle reports Marissa Carol Fields of Olathe was charged Monday in Johnson County court with first-degree murder and aggravated abandonment of a child in connection with the child’s death in December.

Court documents show Fields is accused of neglecting and abandoning the child at an Olathe home.

Her lawyer, Carl Cornwell, declined comment on the case Wednesday, but said Fields has been released on bond.

Joe Kleinsasser, director of news and media relations at Wichita State, says Fields has been a student at Wichita State since the fall of 2014 and was enrolled for the fall 2015 semester.

She’s scheduled to appear in Johnson County court on Aug. 20.

Hearing delayed for Fort Riley bombing plot defendant UPDATE

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A hearing has been pushed back for a 21-year-old Topeka man charged with plotting to plant a bomb at an Army post in Kansas to help the Islamic State group.

On Wednesday, a federal judge granted John T. Booker Jr.’s request for a delay. A hearing to have the status of Booker’s case reviewed was moved from Aug. 19 to Sept. 21.

Booker’s attorney asked to have the hearing postponed because of unspecified scheduling conflicts. The request also said Booker needed more time to confer with his attorneys.

According to court documents, Booker was arrested in April while trying to arm what he thought was a 1,000-pound bomb inside a van near Fort Riley, about an hour west of Topeka.

 

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 21-year-old man charged with plotting to plant a bomb at an Army post in Kansas to help the Islamic State group is asking a federal judge to delay his next court hearing.

An attorney for John T. Booker Jr. of Topeka filed the request Tuesday. Booker was scheduled to appear Aug. 19 before U.S. District Judge Carlos Murguia in Kansas City, Kansas, to have the status of his case reviewed.

Booker’s attorney wants the hearing postponed until Sept. 19 because of unspecified scheduling conflicts. The request also says Booker needs more time to confer with his attorneys.

According to court documents, Booker was arrested in April while trying to arm what he thought was a 1,000-pound bomb inside a van near Fort Riley, about an hour west of Topeka.

Hays man avoids injury after 4-vehicle collision in Johnson Co.

OLATHE — One person was injured in an accident just before 8 a.m. Wednesday in Johnson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Toyota Camry driven by Monicah G. Mwaura, 37, Olathe, was southbound at highway speed on Interstate 35 a mile north of 119th Street in Olathe.

The vehicle collided with a 2006 Econoline van driven by Rafael Hernandez-Flores, 27, Hays, which was stopped in heavy traffic.

The collision pushed the van into a 2004 Kia Spectra driven by Nathan D. Lorenzen, 34, Kansas City and a 2008 Ford Taurus driven by Eric R Christensen, 40, Overland Park.

Mwaura was transported to Overland Park Regional Medical Center.

Hernandez-Flores, Lorenzen, Christensen and a passenger in the van were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Inmates successfully moved to the new Reno Co. jail

photo Reno County Sheriff
photo Reno County Sheriff

Hutch Post

HUTCHINSON – Inmates moved into the new Reno County Correctional Facility at 1800 South Severance on Wednesday.

The new 77-thousand plus square foot jail was built on land purchased from the Kansas Department of Corrections on a 10-acre lot.

The old Reno County Jail at 210 W. 1st and the Jail Annex in Hutchinson are closed and renovation of this area will start shortly.

This old area will provide a new Evidence Holding Facility, Offender Registry Office, Security Office, and Inmate Holding for Court as well as non-court functions from the Courthouse.

The jail was built after county voters approved a half-cent sales tax.

Not only did the sales tax go toward building the new jail, it will be used to move some county offices to the now closed County Jail Annex.

Other plans for the money raised include adding a new entrance to the courthouse and doing some improvements to the Law Enforcement Center.

Project Suitcase hopes to make a difference for Ellis Co. foster children

suitcaseBy COOPER SLOUGH
Hays Post

Each year, thousands of children go in and out of foster care, many of them victims of circumstances beyond their control. There are several steps necessary to get away from the situation. However, according to Ashley Allen, Ellis County Salvation Army coordinator, those steps shouldn’t include packing your life into trash bags in order to move.

“I started Project Suitcase because a suitcase provides (the kids) with a sense of promise and hope,” Allen said.

There are 210 foster children in Ellis County, and Allen is hoping for enough community support to provide each of them with a suitcase. When suitcases are distributed, they include shampoo, conditioner, a treat, a prayer bear and, arguably most important, a name tag.

“I’ve had kids living their lives out of three trash bags in my back seat while moving across the state,” Allen said. “At some point, these kids just believe they’re trash too.”

To donate a suitcase, call Ashley at (785) 621-2794 or stop by the Salvation Army office, 203 E. Seventh, Ste. A.

All donations are tax-deductible.

KSU Vet lab test may help decrease yearly pet vaccines

Vet lab KSU

by Pat Melgares

MANHATTAN — Scientists at Kansas State University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory have modified a test that measures an animal’s immune response to the rabies virus, a change that will cost pet owners less money and may help reduce the number of yearly vaccines for pets.

The scientists say testing an animal for titers, or antibodies capable of neutralizing rabies, is a valid indication of the animal’s resistance to the rabies virus. When the titer test measures 0.5 international units per milliliter or higher, the pet would be considered protected and may only need a booster if bitten or otherwise exposed to the rabies virus, depending on local rabies regulations.

All animals should be vaccinated at an early age with what are known as core vaccines, or those considered by leading veterinary associations to provide protection against the diseases of highest risk to each species. In the past, vaccinated pets would receive a yearly booster for those core vaccines.

The test developed at Kansas State University is not yet accepted by national veterinary organizations as a standard for indicating protection against rabies, though measuring titers currently is used for determining whether cats and dogs need a vaccination for other high-risk diseases.

“In both domestic cats and dogs, there is a positive correlation between rabies neutralizing antibody titers and the level of protection,” said Rolan Davis, a researcher in the Kansas State University Rabies Laboratory, one of only two commercial labs in the U.S. that performs rabies antibody testing, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

But yearly vaccines can sometimes create other health concerns. In cats, for example, yearly vaccinations have been linked to feline injection site sarcomas. Kansas State University’s titer test for rabies could save a pet from one more injection at the yearly exam.

“We are certainly not against vaccinations; we are against rabies,” Davis said. “We are looking for the best ways to prevent rabies in animals and humans.”

Titer tests are commonly available at your local veterinarian’s office. At Kansas State University, a titer test for rabies costs $30; pet owners who would like titer tests for other core vaccines can pay $50 to cover rabies plus the three most common diseases for either a dog or cat.

Kansas State University veterinarians emphasize that all pets should be vaccinated at an early age. Options for pets that have never been vaccinated and that have been exposed to rabies are limited. Generally, the options for unvaccinated dogs and cats are euthanasia or a six-month quarantine in a specialized facility.

More information about rabies, core vaccines and the Kansas State University Rabies Laboratory is available at ksvdl.org/rabies-laboratory, or by contacting the lab at [email protected] or 866-512-5650.

Former Lark lands college baseball coaching position

Southeastern Oklahoma State University Athletics

DURANT — Southeastern Oklahoma State University baseball coach Mike Metheny has announced the addition of Aaron Cornell to serve as the team’s graduate assistant.

Cornell is a graduate of Oklahoma State where he played the 2012 and 2013 seasons.

He was an Academic All-Big 12 selection as a senior and helped his team to a regional championship while hitting .342 with runners in scoring position and added a perfect 12-of-12 stealing bases.

He started his career at Eastern Oklahoma State College, where he hit .389 with 17 doubles, five triples and 37 RBIs while leading the team to a conference championship.

He has an extensive summer league background both as a coach and as a player, serving the summer of 2015 as an assistant coach for the East Texas Pumpjacks of the Texas Collegiate League.

From 2011 to 2014, he played for the Hays Larks and was named Jayhawk League player of the year in 2011.

He played four seasons in all for the Larks following his high school career at Roff High School where he helped his team to state championships in baseball and basketball over his four years as a starter.

Lois Berringer

Funeral services for Goodland, Kansas, resident Lois Berringer, 98, will be held Friday, August 14, 10:00 AM MT at First United Methodist Church in Goodland.

Interment will be at Goodland Cemetery.

Friends may share respects Thursday, August 13, from 5:00 until 7:00 PM MT at Koons Chapel in Goodland. The family will be present to greet friends from 6—7 PM MT.

Memorials to Lois Berringer Memorial may be left at the services or mailed to Koons Funeral Home, 211 North Main, Goodland, KS 67735-1555.

Online condolences to www.koonsfuneralhome.com.

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