DETROIT (AP) — Ford is recalling some older Windstar minivans to because a previous rear-axle recall repair might not work.
The recall covers about 342,000 vans from 1998 through 2003. The company says the Windstars were recalled previously due to axle cracks that could grow and lead to complete failure and a crash.
They’re being recalled again because a reinforcement bracket from the first recall could have been installed incorrectly. The bracket was designed to mitigate problems if the axle failed. The company says it has reports of a small number of accidents but no injuries.
Dealers will inspect the vans, and if the brackets weren’t installed right, replace the axles. If they were correctly installed, customers will be offered a discounted price for axle replacements.
Dozens of aircraft, pilots and aviation enthusiasts will be stopping in Hays Wednesday for an overnight stay as part of the Fly Kansas Air Tour.
The five-day event got underway Tuesday and allows pilots from across the region to travel to different airports and experience each community.
The tour will visit Garden City and Colby on Wednesday morning before arriving in Hays around 1 p.m. Wednesday afternoon, according to Hays Regional Airport Manager Nathan Marcucci.
He said they hope to show the group a part of Hays they might not have experienced before.
“We’re trying to highlight what Hays has to offer.” He added his goal is that, “they will realize that we have a very nice downtown (and), hopefully they come back and spend money.”
The group will visit the Chestnut Street District, and RANS Aircraft Design Factory and stay overnight here in Hays before departing early Thursday morning.
Marcucci expects to have approximately 30 different airplanes and invited the public to come out to the airport and look at the planes. He said plans to keep the viewing area open until sunset.
You can find out more about the tour’s Facebook page.
Despite suffering their first loss of the season, the Hays High volleyball team moves up two spots to No. 3 in the latest 4A Division I coaches poll from the Kansas Volleyball Association. The Indians lost to Newton (No. 5 in 5A) in the finals of the Newton tournament Saturday.
TMP-Marian, who had been ranked No. 2 in 4A Division II, are ranked seventh in 3A. The Monarchs dropped back down to 3A in last week release of enrollment figures from the KSHSAA.
Ness City is fourth in 2A and La Crosse drops a spot to No. 4 in 1A Division I.
Complete rankings below…
Class 6A
1. Olathe Northwest 17-1 (1)
2. Blue Valley West 17-3 (4 in 5A)
3. Shawnee Mission East 19-2 (2)
4. Olathe East 14-4 (3)
5. Derby 18-2 (4)
6. Blue Valley North 11-6 (6)
7. Blue Valley Northwest 13-6 (NR)
8. Washburn Rural 12-4 (8)
9. Wichita East 15-2 (7)
10. Manhattan 12-8 (9)
Class 5A
1. St. James Academy 26-1 (1)
2. Shawnee Heights 16-1 (2)
3. St. Thomas Aquinas 17-5 (3)
4. Lansing 14-2 (5)
5. Newton 21-3 (8)
6. Bishop Carroll 12-5 (NR)
7. Goddard-Eisenhower 15-5 (6)
8. Emporia 14-2 (7)
9. Andover 11-8 (NR)
10. Maize 15-12 (NR)
Class 4A – Division 2
1. Topeka-Hayden 20-5 (1 in 4A Div. 1)
2. Rock Creek 21-2 (1)
3. Holcomb 12-3 (3)
4. Kingman 21-4 (NR)
5. Frontenac 12-4 (5)
6. Clay Center 13-6 (6)
7. Pratt 16-8 (8)
8. Burlington 16-6 (9 in 3A)
9. Wichita Collegiate 11-6 (7 in 3A)
10. Holton 14-9 (4)
Class 3A
1. Silver Lake 22-2 (1)
2. Garden Plain 17-0 (3)
3. Douglass 14-1 (2)
4. Southeast of Saline 19-2 (4)
5. Beloit 16-2 (5)
6. Hesston 14-2 (8)
7. Thomas More Prep-Marian 20-3 (2 in 4A Div. 2)
8. Nemaha Central 15-4 (6)
9. Cheney 14-5 (NR)
10. Marion 16-2 (NR)
Class 2A
1. Central Plains 20-0 (1)
2. Spearville 14-2 (2)
3. St. Mary’s Colgan 23-2 (3)
4. Ness City 13-2 (NR)
5. Valley Falls 18-2 (5)
6. Washington County 11-3 (4)
7. South Central 16-4 (6)
8. Kiowa County 16-4 (7)
9. Heritage Christian Academy 17-0 (NR)
10. Meade 18-4 (NR)
Seven alumni and friends of Fort Hays State University will be honored at the Alumni Awards and Recognition Banquet Friday, Oct. 2, during Homecoming celebrations.
Four honorees will receive the Alumni Achievement Award, the association’s highest honor, established in 1959 to recognize graduates who have made outstanding and unselfish contributions in service to their community, state or nation as citizens, in chosen career fields or through philanthropic work.
This year’s recipients are Roger Barta, Smith Center, retired high school football coach and mathematics teacher; James “Jim” Gillen, Aurora, Colo., the associate athletic director for facilities and community engagement for Metropolitan State University, Denver, and a retired head athletic trainer and team travel coordinator for the Denver Nuggets; Pamala (Thurman) Larsen, Ph.D., Fort Collins, Colo., professor emeritus of the Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing, University of Wyoming, Laramie; and Jon Rosell, Ph.D., Eastborough, executive director of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County.
One alumna will receive the Young Alumni Award, which is granted to graduates of 10- through 15-year reunion classes to recognize those early in their career for significant business or professional accomplishments or for service to the university and the Alumni Association. This year’s recipient is Lacie (Robinson) Gregory, M.D., Wellington, a physician with the Sumner County Family Care Center.
The Nita M. Landrum Award for alumni or friends who have provided sustained volunteer service for the betterment of the Alumni Association or FHSU, especially in their home communities or at any local level, will go to Don Bickle, Hays, chairman of the board for Warehouse Inc.-S&W Supply.
The Distinguished Service Award, which recognizes a graduate or friend of the university who has demonstrated a continuing concern for humanity on a universal, national, state or community level; who supports spiritual, cultural and educational objectives; and who endorses and exemplifies the highest standards of character and personal attributes will be given to Lyle Dilley, Hays, a retired professor of music at FHSU.
ALUMNI ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS
Roger Barta
Roger Barta, Smith Center, graduated from FHSU in 1967 with a B.S. in mathematics. He went on to earn an M.S. in math education in 1971 from the University of Georgia, Athens, where he was also awarded a National Foundation Institute Grant. He is a retired math teacher and football coach and is one of the most renowned high school football coaches in the history of the sport.
Over 34 years as Smith Center’s coach, from 1978 until retiring in 2012, his teams won 323 games (against 68 losses) and eight state championships, including five straight from 2004 to 2008. From 2004 until 2009, his teams won 79 straight games.
He began his teaching and coaching career as a math teacher and assistant football and basketball coach with Rawlins County USD 105 from 1967 to 1970. In 1971, he was a math teacher and football coach with Tonganoxie USD 464. From 1972 to 1977, he was a math teacher at Trego Community High School, WaKeeney.
He began his Smith Center career in 1978. In addition to coaching, he was also a math teacher there until 2007.
He was inducted into the National High School Athletic Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2011 and into the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2014. In 2008, the U.S. All-American Bowl Selection Committee named him the National High School Football Coach of the Year. His story has been featured in The New York Times and in Reader’s Digest. He and his teams were also the subject of the 2009 book, Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains with the Smith Center Redmen, by Joe Drape.
Jim Gillen
James “Jim” Gillen graduated from FHSU with a B.S. in physical education in 1974 and an M.S. in physical education in 1976. Since 2014, he has been the associate athletic director for facilities and community engagement for Metropolitan State University, Denver.
For 23 years he was the head athletic trainer and team travel coordinator for the Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball Association, responsible for working with the team’s medical staff to treat injuries and help players during rehabilitation. He retired from that position in 2014.
Before that, he was the assistant athletic trainer for the Denver Broncos, during which time the Broncos played in three Super Bowls, and was part of a staff which was named the NFL’s Athletic Training Staff of the Year in 1987. He was an athletic trainer for the AMI/Denver Broncos Sports Medicine Clinic and was head athletic trainer at Overland High School from 1982 to 1986, and at Aurora Central High School from 1980 to 1982. After graduating from FHSU, he was head athletic trainer at Roosevelt High School in San Antonio.
During his career, he was an athletic trainer at three NBA All-Star games – two of them as head trainer – and, in both 2002 and 2007, he received the Joe O’Toole NBA Athletic Trainer of the Year Award. He was also an athletic trainer in 2002 for U.S.A. basketball at the world championships in Indianapolis.
Pamala Larsen
Pamala (Thurman) Larsen, Ph.D., graduated from FHSU with a B.S. in Nursing in 1969. She is a professor emeritus of the Fay W. Whitney School of Nursing at the University of Wyoming, Laramie. She earned an M.S. in nursing from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, in 1984 and her Ph.D. in human rehabilitation from the University of Northern Colorado in 1989.
Her career in nursing education began as an LPN clinical instructor and RN refresher course instructor at the Larimer County Vocational-Technical Center, Fort Collins, Colo. She was a staff and charge nurse at Poudre Valley Hospital, Fort Collins, from 1979 to 1983 and a Relief House supervisor for the hospital 1990-1995. She taught at the University of Northern Colorado, Wichita State University and the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, as well as at the University of Wyoming.
While at Wichita State, she won the Rodenberg Teaching Award for the College of Health Professions and was director of the undergraduate nursing program. She was director of the School of Nursing and associate dean of the College of Health and Human Services at UNC Charlotte and was also nominated for UNC’s Woman of the Year Award.
She and her co-author, Ilene Lubkin, received The American Journal of Nursing Book Award for the seventh edition of their book, “Chronic Illness: Impact and Intervention.” The 9th edition of the graduate nursing textbook was published in November 2014. Larsen is also the author of “Finding a Way through Cancer, Dying and Widowhood: A Memoir,” published in December 2013. The memoir chronicles her late husband’s, Randall E. Larsen, and her journey through his cancer, his death and ultimately her first year of being a widow.
Jon Rosell
Jon Rosell, Ph.D., graduated from FHSU in 1977 with a B.S. in elementary education. He went on to earn an M.S. in special education from Kansas State University and a Ph.D. in special education administration from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Since 2006, he has been the executive director of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County.
In his position, he is responsible for a variety of programs and services to the community on behalf of 1,200 physician members of the MSSC. Rosell works extensively with other health care organizations and hospitals in the Wichita metropolitan area in order to improve health and health care.
From 2003 to 2006, he was the owner of Professional Rehabilitation Consultants LLC, Wichita, and was the vocational expert for Social Security Appeal Hearings for the Wichita office of the Social Security Administration. Prior to that, he served as the executive director of the Shaklee Institute for Improving Special Education from 1996 to 2003, and executive vice president for Heartspring, Wichita, from 1993 to 2003.
He was vice president of program services for the Institute of Logopedics, Heartspring, from 1991 to 1993 and assistant director of special education for the Leavenworth County Special Education Cooperative from 1986 to 1991. His career has also included teaching stints at the University of Nebraska, Wichita State and, in 1977, as a special education teacher in Clay Center.
Lacie Gregory
Lacie (Robinson) Gregory, M.D., Wellington, earned a B.S. in biology from FHSU in 2003. She then earned a medical degree from the University of Kansas School of Medicine, Wichita, in 2007. She is a family practice physician in private practice at the Sumner County Family Care Center. She served her residency at Via Christi, Wichita, where she was selected by her peers as chief resident.
In 2007, she received the P.G. Czarlinsky Family Award, presented to a senior student at the Wichita campus for outstanding performance as a student clinician, recognizing skill in patient care and management and understanding of the scholarship and application of the “principles of clinical science. During her medical school education, she also received the competitive Olive Ann Beech Scholarship, which provides funds for a medical student who promises to serve in an inner-city or rural underserved area of Kansas. In 2009, she received an American Academy of Family Physicians Bristol Meyer Squibb Graduate Medical Education Award. This award is given annually to the 20 top family medicine residents in the nation, out of about 3,000 candidates. And, in 2010, she was also presented with an Award of Excellence in Graduate Medical Education from the Wichita School of Medicine.
After her three-year residency, she was recruited to join the faculty of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the KU School of Medicine-Wichita, but, said the chair of the department, she declined in order to enter private family practice in Wellington. “The entire reason Dr. Gregory went to medical school was to practice medicine in a rural community, so she is living her dream,” said Dr. Rick Kellerman, a 1975 FHSU graduate.
Her special interest is maternal healthcare and women’s healthcare. Faculty at Wichita during her medical school career noted, “Her strength is her compassion and empathy for patients. She exhibits that old-school special commodity of ‘bedside manner.'”
NITA LANDRUM AWARD
Don Bickle
Don Bickle, Hays, is the recipient of the Nita M. Landrum Award for alumni or friends who have provided sustained volunteer service for the betterment of the Alumni Association and FHSU.
Bickle is a past president of both Warehouse Inc. and S&W Supply and is the current chairman of the board for both businesses. He has a long and distinguished record of generosity and support for Fort Hays State University, the Hays community and the state and nation.
He holds Platinum membership in the FHSU Alumni Association and received the Association’s Distinguished Service Award in 1995. He is a member of the FHSU President’s Roundtable, the College of Business and Entrepreneurship Advisory Board and the FHSU President’s Club. He is also a member of Tiger Club and a Difference Maker for the university’s athletics. In 2010, he was inducted into the Tiger Sports Hall of Fame.
His community service includes membership on the board of directors for the Hays Medical Center Foundation. He is a past member of the Ellis County Historical Society, a past president of the Kansas Association of Realtors and Hays Realtors, and state chair of the Realtors Political Action Committee. The Kansas Realtors named him Realtor of the Year in 1988, and he was twice named Hays Realtor of the Year.
He is a former member of the Commerce Bank Board of Directors and a past member and vice president of the Ellis County Coalition for Economic Development. He has also been a member of the board of directors for the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce.
He and his wife, Chris, have made numerous contributions to the betterment of the university, including financial support for athletic scholarships and the Schmidt/Bickle Indoor Training Facility. Additionally, the Bickles have generously donated to the Beyond Medicine Capital Campaign of HaysMed and are major donors to the Bickle/Schmidt Sports Complex.
DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD
Lyle Dilley
Lyle Dilley, Hays, a retired professor of music at FHSU, is the Distinguished Service Award winner. His music education was at Wichita State University, earning a Bachelor of Music Education in 1948 and a Master of Music Education in 1957. His career as an educator started in 1948 in Belle Plaine, where he taught vocal music for grades 1 through 12 and instrumental music for grades 4 through 12 in addition to teaching world history and supervising a study hall.
By 1951, the Belle Plaine band had increased from 30 to 60 members. He began teaching in Wellington that year, teaching band and orchestra in five grade schools as well as in junior high and senior high schools. He also directed a junior high choir.
He came to FHSU in 1961 as director of bands and instructor of low brass. By 1970, the band had grown from about 50 to 150 members. His other duties came to include conducting the Hays Symphony Orchestra and conducting and supervising student teaching. He became director of the High Plains Band Camp (now High Plains Music Camp) in 1975.
He organized the second Kansas High School Marching Band competition in 1962 and the first Kansas High School Invitational Concert Band workshop in 1963. In 1985, he organized the Hays Symphony Guild to support the work of the Hays Symphony Orchestra. The FHSU Symphonic Band, Hays Symphony Orchestra and Low Brass Choir performed at the Kansas Music Educator’s Association state conventions numerous times under his baton. The Symphonic Band also was selected to perform for several regional music conventions across the central United States sponsored by the Music Educator’s National Convention.
Music education has not been just a career for him, it has been a cause and a mission. Professionally, this has meant membership and leadership in the Kansas Music Educators Association as president and vice president; president of KMEA District 6; state chair of the College Band Directors National Association; and membership with the American School Band Directors Association.
His musical career also included 11 years as a bass trombonist in the Wichita Symphony Orchestra.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
“The U.S. Department of Education reports that 81 percent of the class of 2013 graduated within four years…” according to a report in Education Week earlier this year. Considering that the graduation rate was just under 70 percent 15 years ago, this over-ten-percent increase is unbelievable news. Yes, truly unbelievable.
Now, the figures are correct. They are based on the Adjusted Cohort Graduation Rate (ACGR) metric required by No Child Left Behind. This is based on the number of freshmen who graduate four years later. But even when other methods are used for calculating graduation rates, the trend is still upward.
These figures point to the supreme ability of some and perhaps many public school administrators to undermine teacher grading and inflate grades to meet government-mandated “school improvement.”
One teacher explained how her school allowed teachers to keep the 90-80-70-60 percentage cut-off scores for A-B-C-D. But the school then required that zero performance started at 50! Score 10 percent and you were over the 60 percent line and made a D. Score 20 percent and you were now a C student. Considering that many tests are multiple choice with 4 or 5 answers, random marking would score at 20 to 25 percent which, plus 50, would make a student “average.”
Another teacher described a student who never did his homework. At the end of each grading period, when it was obvious that the student had earned a zero, the school counselor pulled the student from class and put him on a programmed learning computer. Without even reading the screen, the student could progress through the question sets over and over until he had a passing or even a good score. This F-student who formerly would have flunked out of high school was now walking across the stage getting a diploma, right behind good students who completed genuine course work and earned their diploma.
Any professional educator should recognize that these programmed learning exercises for “recovering credit” are fraudulent. But instead of being fired for circumventing actual teaching and grading, they are rewarded and promoted for increasing graduation rates.
Yes, there are public schools where honest and solid teaching still occurs and these cheap end-runs are not allowed. But the number of teachers who report to me that they feel coerced into giving higher grades is increasing rapidly. School climate is changing. Whether they are beginning or veteran teachers, it is becoming more risky to assign high school students a failing grade even when the students do nothing.
The upbeat U.S. Department of Education report breaks down this increase in graduation rates for various subgroups. It reveals that the grade inflation raises all boats. 89 percent of Asian-Americans graduate on time while only 70 percent of Native American students graduate in four years.
Sixty-two percent of students with disabilities graduate on time, an increase but still 19 points lower than the national rate. Student graduation in Iowa was highest at 90 percent, lowest in the District of Columbia at 62 percent. And 61 percent of students with limited English graduated.
How can we know that this dramatic 10-percent-plus increase in student graduation does not reflect a surge in better teachers and better students?
In addition to teacher reports-from-the-field, the recently released ACT and SAT scores show that the number of high school seniors ready for college is not increasing and remains below 40 percent. And despite growing college enrollments, veteran college professors are not seeing any surge in student performance. Instead, the numbers of American-educated students who persist in college and graduate to apply for high-skill professions such as medicine or engineering are decreasing. The United States is increasing our reliance on foreign students.
More-and-more, the criterion for receiving a public high school diploma in America is maintaining a heartbeat.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Parole has been revoked for one of two men convicted in the 1980 Topeka killings of a Kansas woman and her young son.
Kansas Department of Corrections spokesman Adam Pfannenstiel said Tuesday that the Kansas Prisoner Review Board revoked Tony Hobbs’ parole after concluding he violated its conditions when he possessed and tested positive for methamphetamines. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Hobbs wasn’t charged with any new law violations.
Hobbs was convicted of first-degree murder and second-degree murder in the strangulation and stabbing death of 28-year-old Karen Crook and the drowning death of her 4-year-old son, Brandon Cook. Hobbs told police he used a pillow to try to smother Crook’s 7-year-old son, but the boy survived.
Board members have decided not to consider parole for Hobbs until March 2017.
Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.
By RON WILSON Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development
Let’s go to Japan, where a buyer has ordered an antique cabinet accessory. The authentic antique has now arrived. From where do you suppose it was shipped? Yes, it came from halfway around the world, from a remarkable business in rural Kansas.
Margaret and Gary Kraisinger are owners of The Old Hardware Store which provided this antique item for the Japanese buyer. Margaret was born in Garden City and grew up at Great Bend.
“I grew up liking antiques and collecting antiques,” she said. Margaret went on to Fort Hays State where she got her education degree. She also met and married Gary Kraisinger.
She and Gary were teachers for a time in western Kansas where they developed a strong interest in history. Then Gary chose to go into a business career and joined a construction company. His business career ultimately took them to Wichita. When they had children, they looked for a small town school system. In 1979, they moved to Halstead where they raised three children. After 51 years of marriage, they now have eight grandchildren also.
Margaret continued her teaching career and retired in 1997. Shortly after she retired, the old hardware store in downtown Halstead came up for sale.
“I had always admired that store,” Margaret said. In 1998, she and Gary bought the business and renamed it “The Old Hardware Store.” I call that truth in advertising.
The store was located in a historic building that had been built in 1878. The original owners had started the hardware store in 1885. In 1910 they installed a tin ceiling and in 1916, they brought in oak wall cabinets. In the 1950s, another generation of owners covered the cabinets with pegboard, painted many of the fixtures, and installed fluorescent lighting.
When the Kraisingers bought the building, they set out to restore its classic look. “I wanted to create a time capsule of the 1920s era,” Margaret said. They removed the pegboard, restored the cabinets, repainted the tin ceiling, changed the lights, and oiled the old plank flooring. In August 1999, The Old Hardware Store reopened for business.
Margaret realized that the business needed a special niche, and she decided to build on her interest in antiques, but with a specialty. She decided to specialize in original, authentic antique hardware. This might be architectural hardware, for doors and windows, or furniture hardware, for cupboards, cabinets, trunks, boxes, etc.
Margaret insists that the products sold be genuine antique items: No reproductions or replicas.
Today, The Old Hardware Store has an amazing inventory of vintage hardware items from the 1870s to the 1970s and beyond. “I probably have a selection that (customers) can’t find anywhere else,” Margaret said. Furthermore, this inventory is found in a building which itself is beautifully restored and 137 years old.
Customers traveled to The Old Hardware Store from far away. They told Margaret that she needed to have an online catalog. So, in 2013, she hired a tech-savvy assistant and launched a website catalog with 1400 items and point-of-sale software. The catalog even lists hardware by era. Since that time, The Old Hardware Store has shipped products to 42 states, Australia, and Japan.
This is quite a remarkable record for a business located in a rural community such as Halstead, population 1,880 people. Now, that’s rural.
Margaret guarantees that all of these items are authentic antiques. She even offers same-day shipping. An architectural salvage specialist in Illinois described The Old Hardware Store as one of the top three antique hardware sites in the nation.
It’s time to leave Japan, where we can find an antique furniture item that was shipped all the way from rural Kansas. We commend Margaret and Gary Kraisinger of The Old Hardware Store for making a difference with entrepreneurship in authentic antiques.
And there’s more. Remember that Gary and Margaret were interested in history? That interest would lead them to study the old cattle trails. In fact, they wrote the book on them – and I mean that literally. We’ll learn about that next week.
Fort Hays State Weekly Football Press Conference
September 29, 2015
Fort Hays State head football coach Chris Brown along with select players met with members of the media on Tuesday. The 3-1 Tigers, who are receiving votes in the latest AFCA Division II coaches poll, look to bounce back from their loss to No. 15 Pittsburg State when they host Washburn in their homecoming game this Saturday night at 7 p.m. at Lewis Field.
After decades of being simply known as “The Mall” in Hays, the shopping center currently being rehabilitated through a Community Improvement District is ready to unveil a new name that reflects the desire to become a gathering place for the community.
At 9 a.m. Thursday, The Mall will have a Hays Area Chamber of Commerce ribbon-cutting ceremony, with entertainment by the Fort Hays State University Band, dance team and a local orchestra.
The public is encouraged to attend the event and enjoy coffee provided by Culligan of Hays.
Two stores in The Mall before the remodel began.
The event will kick off a full weekend of events for the Mall, in conjunction with the FHSU Homecoming and Oktoberfest.
“Along with all the hype going on with Oktoberfest, the Fort Hays game and the parade, we are also having a home-based business fair on Saturday,” said Cody Dale, marketing director for The Mall.
Avon, Pampered Chef, DIY furniture and crafts will be available at the fair.
“The list goes on and on,” Dale said.
The fair will be held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday. There are still spots available for vendors. To secure a spot interested parties can call The Mall office, visit facebook, or email at [email protected].
What the new name will mean
The events will help kick off the new name and attitude at the property.
“We wanted it to stand for something in the community,” said Katie Dorzweiler, property manager for The Mall. “We want it to feel like a neighbor and a family here.”
As the property is being rehabilitated, so is the mission of the property.
The current Mall logo will be replaced Thursday with a new representation of what the property means to Hays.
“This isn’t just a place to shop,” Dorzweiler said. “We make it, in essence a community center, and so this is a neighborhood hub. This is where families can shop, get everything for school, get their family photo wardrobes, find the latest fashions.”
Frequent events will also help make the property a draw to area residents.
“The reason that outside shopping is so big right now — Legends and those things — is because it’s an adventure,” Dorzweiler said, noting part of her mission is to bring that same vision to a dated interior shopping property and the new image at the property will help.
In general, The Mall is becoming “family oriented with something for dad, mom and the children,” Dorzweiler said.
Changes at The Mall will give residents what they want
“Just the persona The Mall has had … The Mall as a whole has changed,” Dorzweiler said. “What I read is people want these things, and they are already things that are present here in our mall.
“What I would say to that survey: We have it here.”
The Mall in Hays is currently being remodeled including updated lighting, floors and parking. The final look was projected in this image before the work began.
But the property managers understand why area residents are hesitant to come to The Mall after so many years of neglect by previous property owners.
“One of the things we really want to do is invite people back to our mall,” Dale said. “We really encourage people to come back, because the feel has changed and the attitude has changed.”
The name may help draw a crowd initially, but the improved experience, they hope, will keep people coming back.
“Revisit us,” Dale said. “We have changed some things physically,” adding the more significant change may be in the attitude and the service at The Mall.
Norene Farmer Smith, age 87, of Ellis, KS passed away Monday, September 28, 2015 at the Good Samaritan Society, Ellis. She was born May 12, 1928 in Gainesville, MO to Arnold H. and Lucy (Shelton) Farmer. She grew up on a farm outside of Gainesville and attended Gainesville High School. She married Doyne P. Smith of Sycamore, MO on July 23, 1946 in Mountain Home, AR. He preceded her in death December 14, 2001.
She was a homemaker and had lived in the Ellis since 1959. She cofounded with her husband Doyne and helped run Triangle Well Service.
She is survived by a son, Rick Smith and wife Sheryl of Buhler, KS; three grandchildren, Tara Goans and husband Lonnie of Buhler, Mindy Fry and husband Andy of Desoto, KS and Brett Smith and wife Julie of Paola, KS; a sister, Geraldine Smith of Rogersville, AR; five great grandchildren, Colton, Alyson and Ty Goans, Mason Fry and Bella Smith as well as numerous nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents; infant granddaughter, Tayllor Paige Goans and a brother, Arnold D. Farmer.
Funeral services will be 10 am Friday, October 2, 2015 at Keithley Funeral Chapel 400 E 17th Ellis, KS 67637. Burial will follow in Mt. Hope Cemetery in Ellis.
Visitation will be Thursday 5 pm – 8 pm with family present from 7-8. Friday visitation will be 9 am until service time.
Memorial contributions are suggested to the Good Samaritan Society, Ellis.
Condolences may be sent by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed to [email protected].
Funeral services for Goodland, Kansas, resident Lee Gotchall, 90, will be held Saturday, October 3, at 10:00 AM MT at First United Methodist Church in Goodland.
Interment, with military honors, will be at Goodland Cemetery.
Friends may share respects Friday from 4:00 until 6:00 PM MT at Koons Chapel in Goodland.
Memorials to American Legion Post 117 may be left at the services or mailed to Koons Funeral Home, 211 North Main, Goodland, KS 67735-1555.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has been charged with abducting a 15-year-old boy and shocking him with jumper cables to get information about a robbery.
The Wichita Eagle reports that 58-year-old Robert McDowell was charged Tuesday with aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery, aggravated assault and criminal threat. It wasn’t immediately known whether he had an attorney.
Wichita police Lt. James Espinoza says a gun was placed against the boy’s back early Sunday as he was walking. Espinoza says the suspect took the teen to a garage, tied him to a trailer hitch, then attached jumper cables to his ears and shocked him repeatedly while questioning him about a recent robbery.
Police say the man’s wallet had been stolen, and he believed the teen knew who was responsible. The boy was eventually released.